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Extensive oceanographic and atmospheric observations obtained during three independent experiments in the Atlantic Ocean are used to demonstrate the relationship between wind speed and the temperature deviation Δ T , which is defined as the sea surface skin temperature (SSST) minus the subsurface bulk sea surface temperature (BSST). At wind speeds 1.5 K are common during periods of high insolation. The variability of Δ T at night is reduced and extreme cool skin temperatures of 6 m s −1 , the variability of Δ T is diminished and the mean value of Δ T approximates a cool bias of −0.14 K±0.1 K. We conclude that BSST measurements obtained at wind speeds >6 m s −1 , when corrected for a small ( −0.14 K) cool bias, are representative of the SSST and can be used with confidence to validate satellite derived SSST. When the wind speed is <6 m s −1 and the magnitude of Δ T is high, in situ radio metric SSST measurements are mandatory to validate satellite derived SSST.
Donlon et al. (Sun,) studied this question.