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2/20/23, 10:00 PM Salinity | Science Mission Directorate

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NewsSalinity
Although everyone knows that seawater is salty, few know that even small variations in
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ocean surface salinity (i.e., concentration of dissolved salts) can have dramatic effects on
the water cycle and ocean circulation. Throughout Earth's history, certain processes
have served to make the ocean salty. The weathering of rocks delivers minerals,
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including salt, into the ocean. Evaporation of ocean water and formation of sea ice both
increase the salinity of the ocean. However these "salinity raising" factors are continually
Get Involved by processes that decrease salinity such as the continuous input of
counterbalanced
fresh water from rivers, precipitation of rain and snow, and melting of ice.

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The NASA Aquarius instrument aboard Argentina's SAC-D satellite is designed to measure global sea surface
salinity. This movie shows salinity patterns as measured by Aquarius from December 2011 through December
2012. Red colors represent areas of high salinity, while blue shades represent areas of low salinity. It is
important to understand salinity, the amount of dissolved salts in water, because it will lead us to better
understanding of the water cycle and can lead to improved climate models. High concentrations (over 37
practical salinity units) are usually in the center of the ocean basins away from the mouths of rivers, which
input fresh water. High concentrations are also in sub-tropical regions due to high rates of evaporation (clear
skies, little rain, and prevailing winds) and in landlocked seas in arid regions. At high latitudes, salinity is low.
This can be attributed to lower evaporation rates and the melting of ice that dilutes seawater. To sum up,
salinity is low where precipitation is greater than evaporation, mainly in coastal or equatorial regions. Credit:
NASA/GSFC/JPL-Caltech

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2/20/23, 10:00 PM Salinity | Science Mission Directorate

Salinity & The Water Cycle


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Understanding why the sea is salty begins with knowing how water cycles among the 
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ocean's physical states: liquid, vapor, and ice. As a liquid, water dissolves rocks and
sediments and reacts with emissions from volcanoes and hydrothermal vents. This
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creates Topics
a complex solution of mineral salts in our ocean basins. Conversely, in other
states such as vapor and ice, water and salt are incompatible: water vapor and ice are
essentially salt free.
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Since 86% of global evaporation and 78% of global precipitation occur over the ocean,
ocean surface salinity is the key variable for understanding how fresh water input and
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output affects ocean dynamics. By tracking ocean surface salinity we can directly
monitor variations in the water cycle: land runoff, sea ice freezing and melting, and
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evaporation and precipitation over the oceans.

Salinity, Ocean Circulation & Climate


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Surface winds drive currents in the upper ocean. Deep below the surface, however,
ocean circulation is primarily driven by changes in seawater density, which is
determined by salinity and temperature. In some regions such as the North Atlantic near
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Greenland, cooled high-salinity surface waters can become dense enough to sink to
great depths. The 'Global Conveyor Belt' visualization (below) shows a simplified model
of howUs
About this type of circulation would work as an interconnected system.

The ocean stores more heat in the uppermost three (3) meters than the entire
Español  Thus density-controlled circulation is key to transporting heat in the ocean
atmosphere.
and maintaining Earth's climate. Excess heat associated with the increase in global
temperature during the last century is being absorbed and moved by the ocean. In
addition, studies suggest that seawater is becoming fresher in high latitudes and
tropical areas dominated by rain, while in sub-tropical high evaporation regions, waters
are getting saltier. Such changes in the water cycle could significantly impact not only
ocean circulation but also the climate in which we live.

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2/20/23, 10:00 PM Salinity | Science Mission Directorate

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'The Global Conveyer Belt' represents in a simple way how currents move beneath the wind-driven upper
ocean. This movie begins by focusing on the North Atlantic east of Greenland, where cold surface waters get
saltier due to evaporation and/or sea ice formation. In this region, surface waters can becomes dense enough
to sink to the ocean depths. This pumping of surface water into the deep ocean forces the deep water to
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horizontally until it can find areas where it can rise back to the surface. This very large, slow current --
estimated to be on the order of 1000 years to complete a full circuit -- is called the thermohaline circulation
because it is caused by temperature (thermo) and salinity (haline) variations. Credit: NASA/GSFC

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Measuring Salinity
Throughout most of history, global understanding of ocean surface salinity was difficult
About Us sampling by ships, buoys, drifters, and moorings was extremely limited.
because
Between 300 and 600 AD, awareness of changes in salinity, temperature, and smell
helped Polynesians explore the southern Pacific Ocean. In the 1870s, scientists aboard
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H.M.S. Challenger systematically measured salinity, temperature, and water density in
the world's oceans. Over the years, techniques for measuring such ocean water
properties have changed drastically in method and accuracy.

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2/20/23, 10:00 PM Salinity | Science Mission Directorate

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NASA's Aquarius instrument has been orbiting earth since June 2011, measuring changes in salinity, or salt
concentration, in the surface of the oceans. In fall 2011, the Aquarius team released this first global map of
ocean saltiness, a composite of the first two and a half weeks of data since the instrument became operational
on August 25, 2011. Click on image to see full size version. Credit: NASA/GSFC/JPL-Caltech
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Launched June 10, 2011, aboard the Argentine spacecraft Aquarius/Satélite de
Aplicaciones Científicas (SAC)-D, Aquarius is NASA’s first satellite instrument specifically
About Usstudy the salt content of ocean surface waters. Salinity variations, one of the
built to
main drivers of ocean circulation, are closely connected with the cycling of freshwater
around the planet and provide scientists with valuable information on how the changing
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global climate is altering global rainfall patterns.

The salinity sensor detects the microwave emissivity of the top 1 to 2 centimeters (about
an inch) of ocean water – a physical property that varies depending on temperature and
saltiness. The instrument collects data in 386 kilometer-wide (240-mile) swaths in an
orbit designed to obtain a complete survey of global salinity of ice-free oceans every
seven days.

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2/20/23, 10:00 PM Salinity | Science Mission Directorate

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This animation is an artist depiction of the Aquarius/SAC-D satellite in orbit around the earth, collecting data
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used to derive salinity measurements. The satellite flies 657 kilometers (408 miles) above Earth in a sun-
synchronous polar orbit that repeats every seven days. Note that this animation was developed prior to the
June 2011 launch of the satellite and thus shows simulated salinity data. Click on image or link above to view
video. Credit: NASA/GSFC/JPL-Caltech
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What can salinity tell us?
Data from Aquarius has unveiled a world of varying salinity patterns. The Arabian Sea,
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nestled up against the dry Middle East, appears much saltier than the neighboring Bay
of Bengal, which gets showered by intense monsoon rains and receives freshwater
About Us from the Ganges and other large rivers. Another mighty river, the Amazon,
discharges
releases a large freshwater plume that heads east toward Africa or bends up north to
the Caribbean, depending on the prevailing seasonal currents. Pools of freshwater
Español ocean currents from the central Pacific Ocean’s regions of heavy rainfall pile
carried by
up next to Panama’s coast, while the Mediterranean Sea sticks out in the Aquarius maps
as a very salty sea.

One of the features that stand out most clearly is a large patch of highly saline water
across the North Atlantic. This area, the saltiest anywhere in the open ocean, is
analogous to deserts on land, where little rainfall and a lot of evaporation occur. A
NASA-funded expedition, the Salinity Processes in the Upper Ocean Regional Study
(SPURS), traveled to the North Atlantic’s saltiest spot to analyze the causes behind this
high salt concentration and to validate Aquarius measurements.

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First full year of validated ocean surface salinityAnimation shows the first full year of validated ocean surface
salinity from NASA's Aquarius instrument, averaged from December 2011 through December 2012. Red colors
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represent areas of high salinity, while blue shades represent areas of low salinity. Aquarius has provided a
global view of salinity variability needed for climate studies. Credit: NASA/GSFC/JPL-Caltech

Future
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In future years, one of the main goals is to fine-tune the readings and retrieve data
closer to the coasts and the poles. Land and ice emit very bright microwave emissions
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that swamp the signal read by the satellite. At the poles, there’s the added complication
that cold polar waters require very large changes in their salt concentration to modify
their microwave signal.
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Another factor that affects salinity readings is intense rainfall. Heavy rain can affect
salinity readings by attenuating the microwave signal Aquarius reads off the ocean
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surface as it travels through the soaked atmosphere. Rainfall can also create roughness
and shallow pools of fresh water on the ocean surface. In the future, the Aquarius team
wants to use another instrument aboard Aquarius/SAC-D, the Argentine-built
Microwave Radiometer, to gauge the presence of intense rain simultaneously to salinity
readings, so that scientists can flag data collected during heavy rainfall.

An ultimate goal is combining the Aquarius measurements to those of its European


counterpart, the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity satellite (SMOS) to produce more
accurate and finer maps of ocean salinity. In addition, the Aquarius team, in
collaboration with researchers at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is about to release
its first global soil moisture dataset, which will complement SMOS’ soil moisture
measurements.

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For more information about NASA's Aquarius mission, visit:


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Last updated: February 20, 2023

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