Currently there are nine different satellites calculating the earth ocean topography,
Cryosat-2,
SARAL,
Jason-3,
Sentinel-3A and
Sentinel-3B,
CFOSat,
HY-2B and HY-2C, and
Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich (also called Jason-CS A).
Jason-3 and
Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich are currently both in space orbiting Earth in a tandem rotation. They are approximately 330 kilometers apart. Ocean surface topography can be derived from
ship-going
measurements of
temperature and
salinity at depth. However, since 1992, a series of
satellite altimetry missions, beginning with
TOPEX/Poseidon and continued with
Jason-1,
Ocean Surface Topography Mission on the Jason-2 satellite, Jason-3 and now Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich have measured sea surface height directly. By combining these measurements with gravity measurements from NASA's
Grace and ESA's GOCE missions, scientists can determine sea surface topography to within a few centimeters.
Jason-1 was launched by a
Boeing Delta II rocket in
California in 2001 and continued measurements initially collected by
TOPEX/Poseidon satellite, which orbited from 1992 up until 2006.
NASA and
CNES, the French space agency, are joint partners in this mission. The main objectives of the Jason satellites is to collect data on the average
ocean circulation around the globe in order to better understand its interaction with the time varying components and the involved mechanisms for initializing ocean models. To monitor the low frequency ocean variability and observe the season cycles and inter-annual variations like
El Niño and
La Niña, the
North Atlantic oscillation, the
pacific decadal oscillation, and
planetary waves crossing the oceans over a period of months, then they will be modeled over a long period of time due to the precise altimetric observations. This includes the study of short-term climatic changes such as
El Nino,
La Nina. The satellites detect global
sea level mean and record the fluctuations. Also detecting the slow change of upper ocean circulation on decadal time scales, every ten years. Studying the transportation of heat and carbon in the ocean and examining the main components that fuel deep water tides. The satellites data collection also helps improve wind speed and height measurements in current time and for long-term studies. Lastly improving our knowledge about the marine
geoid. ==See also==