GRACE and GRACE-FO Related Publications (no abstracts)

Sorted by DateSorted by Last Name of First Author

Hydrological Cycle in the Arabian Sea Region from GRACE/GRACE-FO Missions and ERA5 Data

Boulahia, Ahmed Kamel, García-García, David, Trottini, Mario, Sayol, Juan-Manuel, and Vigo, M. Isabel, 2024. Hydrological Cycle in the Arabian Sea Region from GRACE/GRACE-FO Missions and ERA5 Data. Remote Sensing, 16(19):3577, doi:10.3390/rs16193577.

Downloads

from the NASA Astrophysics Data System  • by the DOI System  •

BibTeX

@ARTICLE{2024RemS...16.3577B,
       author = {{Boulahia}, Ahmed Kamel and {Garc{\'i}a-Garc{\'i}a}, David and {Trottini}, Mario and {Sayol}, Juan-Manuel and {Vigo}, M. Isabel},
        title = "{Hydrological Cycle in the Arabian Sea Region from GRACE/GRACE-FO Missions and ERA5 Data}",
      journal = {Remote Sensing},
     keywords = {Arabian Gulf, water transport components, Strait of Hormuz, runoff, net water inflow},
         year = 2024,
        month = sep,
       volume = {16},
       number = {19},
          eid = {3577},
        pages = {3577},
     abstract = "{The Arabian Gulf, a semi-enclosed basin in the Middle East, connects to
        the Indian Ocean through the Strait of Hormuz and is surrounded
        by seven arid countries. This study examines the water cycle of
        the Gulf and its surrounding areas using data from the GRACE and
        GRACE Follow-On missions, along with ERA5 atmospheric reanalysis
        data, from 05/2002 to 05/2017 and from 07/2018 to 12/2023. Our
        findings reveal a persistent water deficit due to high
        evaporation rates, averaging 370 {\ensuremath{\pm}} 3
        km$^{3}$/year, greatly surpassing precipitation, which accounts
        for only 15\% of the evaporative loss. Continental runoff
        provides one-fifth of the needed water, while the remaining
        deficit, approximately 274 {\ensuremath{\pm}} 10 km$^{3}$/year,
        is balanced by net inflow of saltwater from the Indian Ocean.
        Seasonal variations show the lowest net inflow of 26
        {\ensuremath{\pm}} 49 km$^{3}$/year in March and the highest of
        586 {\ensuremath{\pm}} 53 km$^{3}$/year in November, driven by
        net evaporation, continental input, and changes in the Gulf's
        water budget. This study highlights the complex hydrological
        dynamics influenced by climate patterns and provides a baseline
        for future research in the region, which will be needed to
        quantify the expected changes in the hydrological cycle due to
        climate change.}",
          doi = {10.3390/rs16193577},
       adsurl = {https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2024RemS...16.3577B},
      adsnote = {Provided by the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System}
}

Generated by bib2html_grace.pl (written by Patrick Riley modified for this page by Volker Klemann) on Thu Dec 12, 2024 11:52:51

GRACE

Thu Dec 12, F.Flechtner