Harnessing remote sensing to address critical science questions on ocean-atmosphere interactions
A paper titled "Harnessing remote sensing to address critical science questions on ocean-atmosphere interactions", resulting from the SOLAS-ESA workshop in Frascati in 2016 has been published!
This perspective review on how current and emerging remote sensing technologies could help address two scientific questions within the SOLAS science plan: (1) to what extent does upper-ocean biology affect the composition and radiative properties of the marine boundary layer; and (2) to what extent does upper-ocean turbulence drive fluxes of mass and energy at the air-sea interface are presented in this paper.
Reference: Neukermans, G., Harmel, T., Galí, M., Rudorff, N., Chowdhary, J., Dubovik, O., Hostetler, C., Hu, Y., Jamet, C., Knobelspiesse, K., Lehahn, Y., Litvinov, P., Sayer, A.M., Ward, B., Boss, E., Koren, I. and Miller, L.A., 2018. Harnessing remote sensing to address critical science questions on ocean-atmosphere interactions. Elementa Science of the Anthropocene, 6(1), p.71. DOI: http://doi.org/10.1525/elementa.331
Read and download the publication here:
https://www.elementascience.org/articles/10.1525/elementa.331/
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