Plot title
The title of the example plot specifies three data sources:
Panels 1 and 2 (from left)
The black lines are the fast delivery versions of the Argo float's temperature and salinity observations. Linetypes: dotted=raw data, dashed=QC'd raw data, dot-dashed=adjusted data, solid=adjusted, QC'd data. The quality control and adjustments are those included in the Argo fast delivery data files. The red lines are climatogical estimates, ie what is 'normal' for the time of year at the float's location.
The blue lines are synTS at the location of the Argo float. In the example above, Argo and synTS are in near-perfect agreement that the ocean is colder than normal all the way to 2000m and fresher than normal down to 1000m.
Panel 3
These lines show differences from the climatological profiles, of both temperature and salinity. The Argo T, S and P data are only those that pass the fast delivery QC, ie flags 1,2 or 5. Dashed lines are the original instrument data, solid lines are adjusted (by the PI), eg for known calibration error.
Panel 4
This shows the AMSR-E (Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer, which has only coarse spatial resolution but sees through cloud) three-day average sea surface temperature to show the regional context of the Argo profile. The surface-most Argo observation is encoded within the symbol for comparison with the satellite. The colour bar (not shown) is 6K wide and is centered on the climatological value at the float's location.
Panel 5
This shows the altimetric sea level anomaly (colour bar is -0.6 to 0.6m) for comparison with h1000, the surface steric height anomaly relative to 1000m. These are different quantities, the first estimated at coarse resolution from space and the second by an in-situ device, so the estimates are bound to disagree to some extent. They usually do agree within +/-0.15m, however, confirming that most of the sea level anomaly (ie, the difference from the time-mean of inverse-barometer adjusted sea level) is due to the anomaly (ie, the difference from the CARS2009 time-mean) of the vertical-integral from 1000m of the water density. This particular float sampled to nearly 2000m so h2000, the steric height anomaly relative to 2000m, has also been calculated and this value (-0.48m) is even closer to the altimetric estimate (-0.51m) than h1000 (-0.4m).
Example 2: A submerged mixed-layer
It is not usually as easy as it was for the example above to estimate the subsurface properties of the ocean from satellite data. This is illustrated by the plot below, which describes a relatively warm, but salty and therefore neutrally buoyant, submerged mixed layer at 200m-500m that was not inferrable from the satellite data. This water has come from Bass Strait. Bass Strait water is rarely seen in vertical profiles in the western Tasman Sea (only 7 examples from 2420 profiles since 1982) because the water forms 200 m+ tall lenses at the centre of anti-cyclones (Baird and Ridgway, 2012).
Example 3: disagreement of Argo and synTS
We're not yet sure why the image below shows so much disagreement between synTS and Argo. The synTS estimate of the vertical structure of the warm (and slightly salty) anomaly is confirmed by Argo but the synTS amplitude of that anomaly is much greater than the Argo observations, suggesting that the gridded altimetry has over-estimated the sea level anomaly at the location of the float. Stepping back through time, however, shows that the apparent over-estimation is persistent, and more a property of the eddy (or location) than float number 590658. Eg, see [float 5903653 on 23 Aug]. Confirmation that the sea level anomaly is usually correct in mid September at this location is provided by agreement of the surface geostrophic velocity with the trajectory and speed of surface drifters, e.g.: [snapshot SST, altimetry and drifter].