UK Space Agency: SWOT - Surface Water and Ocean Topography

12 Dec 2022 02:22 PM

The UK Space Agency is part of the SWOT mission, which is a global satellite survey of the Earth's surface water that observes the ocean's surface topography.

Using specialised technology to measure the elevation of water, SWOT will observe oceans, major lakes, rivers and wetlands in high-level resolution. SWOT data will provide information that is needed to assess water resources on land, track regional sea level changes, monitor coastal processes, and observe small-scale ocean currents and eddies.

The UK Space Agency is part of the mission, that has been jointly developed by NASA and Centre National D’Etudes Spatiales (CNES) with contributions from the Canadian Space Agency (CSA)

Honeywell UK has developed the Duplexer, a high-power switching system that is part of the radio-frequency unit, which was funded by the UK Space Agency who contributed £12.22m.

Lead UK scientists are Paul Bell and Christine Gommenginger of the National Oceanography Centre (NOC), Paul Bates of Bristol University and Simon Neill of Bangor University.

## The SWOT mission – UK Space Agency

Freshwater Resources

SWOT will provide data from hundreds of thousands of lakes as well as the discharge volumes of medium-to-large rivers. These key measurements will support scientific research to:

Ocean, Coasts and Climate

Global ocean circulation balances Earth’s climate and makes our planet habitable.

However, much ocean motion occurs at scales too small to be detected globally with today’s technology. These small-scale ocean currents contain most of the energy that powers the mixing and transport of water and are important factors in assessing climate change.

Information from SWOT will be used to: