Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ni, Hanyue, Yang, Jingsong, Ren, Lin, Li, Xiaohui, Dong, Changming, Chen, Wen
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.13437
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866916620180389888
author Ni, Hanyue
Yang, Jingsong
Ren, Lin
Li, Xiaohui
Dong, Changming
Chen, Wen
author_facet Ni, Hanyue
Yang, Jingsong
Ren, Lin
Li, Xiaohui
Dong, Changming
Chen, Wen
contents Air-sea interface fluxes significantly impact the reliability and efficiency of maritime communication. Compared to sparse in-situ ocean observations, satellite remote sensing data offers broader coverage and extended temporal span. This study utilizes COARE V3.5 algorithm to calculate momentum flux, sensible heat flux, and latent heat flux at the air-sea interface, based on satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) wind speed data, reanalysis data, and buoy measurements, combined with neural network methods. Findings indicate that SAR wind speed data corrected via neural networks show improved consistency with buoy-measured wind speeds in flux calculations. Specifically, the bias in friction velocity decreased from -0.03 m/s to 0.01 m/s, wind stress bias from -0.03 N/m^2 to 0.00 N/m^2, drag coefficient bias from -0.29 to -0.21, latent heat flux bias from -8.32 W/m^2 to 5.41 W/m^2, and sensible heat flux bias from 0.67 W/m^2 to 0.06 W/m^2. Results suggest that the neural network-corrected SAR wind speed data can provide more reliable environmental data for maritime communication.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_13437
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Research on the Offshore Marine Communication Environment Based on Satellite Remote Sensing Data
Ni, Hanyue
Yang, Jingsong
Ren, Lin
Li, Xiaohui
Dong, Changming
Chen, Wen
Signal Processing
Air-sea interface fluxes significantly impact the reliability and efficiency of maritime communication. Compared to sparse in-situ ocean observations, satellite remote sensing data offers broader coverage and extended temporal span. This study utilizes COARE V3.5 algorithm to calculate momentum flux, sensible heat flux, and latent heat flux at the air-sea interface, based on satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) wind speed data, reanalysis data, and buoy measurements, combined with neural network methods. Findings indicate that SAR wind speed data corrected via neural networks show improved consistency with buoy-measured wind speeds in flux calculations. Specifically, the bias in friction velocity decreased from -0.03 m/s to 0.01 m/s, wind stress bias from -0.03 N/m^2 to 0.00 N/m^2, drag coefficient bias from -0.29 to -0.21, latent heat flux bias from -8.32 W/m^2 to 5.41 W/m^2, and sensible heat flux bias from 0.67 W/m^2 to 0.06 W/m^2. Results suggest that the neural network-corrected SAR wind speed data can provide more reliable environmental data for maritime communication.
title Research on the Offshore Marine Communication Environment Based on Satellite Remote Sensing Data
topic Signal Processing
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.13437