Follow this link to skip to the main content NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology JPL HOME EARTH SOLAR SYSTEM STARS & GALAXIES SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY BRING THE UNIVERSE TO YOU JPL Email News RSS Podcast Video
JPL Banner
Surface Water and Ocean Topography - SWOT
MISSION
Why SWOT?

This is an artists concept of the SWOT spacecraft.
Artists concept of SWOT.
The Surface Water & Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission brings together two communities focused on a better understanding of the world's oceans and its terrestrial surface waters. U.S. and French oceanographers and hydrologists and international partners have joined forces to develop this new space mission to make the first global survey of Earth's surface water, observe the fine details of the ocean's surface topography, and measure how water bodies change over time. SWOT was one of 15 missions listed in the 2007 National Research Council Decadal Survey of Earth science as missions that NASA should implement in the coming decade.

U.S. Government Actions

The SWOT satellite mission with its wide-swath altimetry technology is a means of completely covering the world's oceans and freshwater bodies with repeated high-resolution elevation measurements. SWOT is a truly multi-disciplinary cooperative international effort.


This is a photo of the bank of the Waitangi River.
Waitangi River bank.
Given our basic need for fresh water, hydrologic observations of the temporal and spatial variations in water volumes stored in rivers, lakes, and wetlands are extremely important. Unfortunately, our knowledge of the global dynamics of terrestrial surface waters and their interactions with coastal oceans in estuaries is very limited. By measuring water storage changes in all wetlands, lakes, and reservoirs and making it possible to estimate discharge in rivers more accurately, SWOT will contribute to a fundamental understanding of the terrestrial branch of the global water cycle. SWOT will also map wetlands and non-channelized flow.



This is a photo of a beautiful ocean sunset.
A beautiful ocean sunset.
Where most of the ocean's kinetic energy and its dissipation takes place--at scales shorter than 100 km--our understanding of the oceanic circulation is poor. Circulation at these scales is responsible for transporting half of the heat and carbon from the upper ocean to the deep ocean. Knowing more about this process is critical for understanding global climate change. SWOT will provide high-spatial resolution, global measurements of ocean surface topography. These measurements will improve ocean circulation models leading to better prediction of weather and climate as well as variations in ocean currents important for navigation, fisheries, and offshore commercial operations.


Mission Documents
  • SWOT Science Requirements Document

SWOT Partner pages:
  • CNES SWOT page: http://smsc.cnes.fr/SWOT/
  • Canadian Space Agency: http://www.asc-csa.gc.ca/
    The Canadian Space Agency’s contribution to the international mission is an Extended Interaction Klystron (EIK), a satellite radar component that will generate microwave pulses used to gather the surface information. Canada will be a partner of the mission’s Science Working Group and the Canadian science community will gain access to important scientific knowledge and expertise.
Related links:

USA Gov
Site Manager: Margaret Srinivasan
Webmaster: Kristy Kawasaki
JPL Clearance: CL09-2052