Training neural mapping schemes for satellite altimetry with simulation data
Quentin Febvre, Julien Le Sommer, Cl\'ement Ubelmann, Ronan Fablet

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that training neural mapping schemes on simulated ocean data significantly improves satellite altimetry surface height estimates, outperforming existing products and highlighting the importance of realistic simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a simulation-based training approach for neural mapping schemes in satellite altimetry, showing improved performance over traditional methods.
Findings
Simulation-trained neural schemes outperform operational products
Realistic ocean simulations enhance mapping accuracy
Eddy-rich, tide-free simulations yield best results
Abstract
Satellite altimetry combined with data assimilation and optimal interpolation schemes have deeply renewed our ability to monitor sea surface dynamics. Recently, deep learning (DL) schemes have emerged as appealing solutions to address space-time interpolation problems. The scarcity of real altimetry dataset, in terms of space-time coverage of the sea surface, however impedes the training of state-of-the-art neural schemes on real-world case-studies. Here, we leverage both simulations of ocean dynamics and satellite altimeters to train simulation-based neural mapping schemes for the sea surface height and demonstrate their performance for real altimetry datasets. We analyze further how the ocean simulation dataset used during the training phase impacts this performance. This experimental analysis covers both the resolution from eddy-present configurations to eddy-rich ones, forced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing · Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations
