The initial development of the Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS) Ocean Surface Heat Flux Product, shortly after the satellite mission began, quickly became a valuable tool for analyzing and monitoring latent and sensible heat fluxes over tropical and subtropical oceans. It helps improve understanding of their influence on tropical and extratropical cyclones, tropical convection, atmospheric rivers, and more. Since its first release, the product has been updated with new ancillary input data (such as temperature and humidity), algorithm adjustments to incorporate equivalent neutral winds from CYGNSS, and the addition of local solar time to support diurnal analysis. As a mature mission and data product, CYGNSS provides important climatological and long-term insights into the tropical and subtropical oceans, filling gaps where in situ observations and data from other remote sensing instruments are limited. This paper outlines the updates and changes made to the CYGNSS Fluxes since its inception, compares the current dataset with in situ data, and discusses CYGNSS’s long-term observations of ocean surface heat fluxes in the tropical and subtropical regions.
Crespo et al. (Tue,) studied this question.