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Simon A. Good

Researcher at Met Office

Publications -  37
Citations -  3692

Simon A. Good is an academic researcher from Met Office. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ocean heat content & Sea surface temperature. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 37 publications receiving 2849 citations. Previous affiliations of Simon A. Good include University of Leicester.

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EN4: Quality controlled ocean temperature and salinity profiles and monthly objective analyses with uncertainty estimates

TL;DR: The Met Office Hadley Centre published version 4 of the EN series of data sets of global quality controlled ocean temperature and salinity profiles and monthly objective analyses, which covers the period 1900 to present as mentioned in this paper.
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Robust warming of the global upper ocean

TL;DR: XBT data constitute the majority of the in situ measurements of upper-ocean heat content from 1967 to 2002, and it is found that the uncertainty due to choice of XBT bias correction dominates among-method variability in OHCA curves during the 1993–2008 study period.
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A review of global ocean temperature observations: Implications for ocean heat content estimates and climate change

TL;DR: The evolution of ocean temperature measurement systems is presented with a focus on the development and accuracy of two critical devices in use today (expendable bathythermographs and conductivity-temperature-depth instruments used on Argo floats).
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The Ocean Reanalyses Intercomparison Project (ORA-IP)

TL;DR: In this article, a multi-reanalysis ensemble is used to estimate the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the ocean state and to estimate uncertainty levels.
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Satellite-based time-series of sea-surface temperature since 1981 for climate applications.

TL;DR: A climate data record of global sea surface temperature (SST) spanning 1981–2016 has been developed from 4 × 1012 satellite measurements of thermal infra-red radiance, and target applications include: climate and ocean model evaluation; quantification of marine change and variability;Climate and ocean-atmosphere processes; and specific applications in ocean ecology, oceanography and geophysics.