Title: Method to force surface salinity
1Method to force surface salinity
2Arctic fresh water content
3Force surface salinity
Problem Could be unstable and/or produce
unphysical oscillations Solution Use partially
coupled climate models (simple but costly) Other
suggestions?
Gerdes, Hurlin Griffies, 2006
4Coupled models much more stable
- Heat advection feedback counters salt advection
feedback - Almost closed water balance at each time
- Example
- increase in run-off into the Arctic Ocean
- Reduction in meridional transport of salt
- Accumulation of salt in the subtropics (enhanced
by the atmospheric transport of water from the
subtropics into the Arctic) - Transport of more saline water northward
520th century forcing for global ocean-sea ice
models
Rüdiger Gerdes
6Availabe data and methods
- Reconstruction for the Arctic Ocean (Kauker et
al., JGR, 2009) - CALYPSO climate reanalysis
- project (failed to get funded)
- Reanalysis projects for the 20th century (Compo
et al., BAMS, 2006)
7CALYPSO - ClimAte variabiLitY assessment through
re-analyses of PaSt Oceanic data
In summary, the specific goals of CALYPSO are the
production of ORE-50 (1958-2008) Ocean
RE-analyses at highest horizontal and vertical
resolutions with different models/assimilation
schemes for the ocean essential variables at
global and regional (Pan- European Seas) scales
forced with atmospheric forcing from 1958-2008
produced specifically for CALYPSO inside the
project and derived from the ECMWF ERA-40 and
other forcing data set. ORE-120 (1888-2008)
Ocean RE-analyses for the ocean essential
variables with different models/assimilation
schemes at global and regional (Pan-European
Seas) scales forced with AMIP forcing from
1888-2008 produced specifically for CALYPSO for
the period 1888-2008. REP-120 and REP-50
REProcessed multi-satellite and in-situ
observational data for the period 1888-2008.
REC-120 and/or REC-50 REConstructed data sets
using statistical algorithms for the longest
possible period. CALYPSO produces both purely
observational analyses or REConstructions (REC)
and the so-called Ocean RE-analyses (ORE) that
meld numerical general circulation model
information with observations. It uses the
longest time series of relevant ocean climate
variables available in historical archives
already available at European level. The
present-day project organizing the archives of
the ocean data is SeaDataNet, in which many of
the CALYPSO partners also participate. CALYPSO
makes use of the metadata infrastructures build
by SeaDataNet and MyOcean and uses both satellite
and in-situ observations from both services.
8Reconstruction of atmospheric forcing(as in
Kauker et al., 2009)
Can be done in many different ways. Needs to be
validated if possible. Needs expertise and
time. Can not yield patterns that are not
present in the tuning period. (In our case
Tuning period 1948 1978 instead of 1958 1988
did not reproduce the recent warming
anomaly.) Have ot be aware of possible
overfitting. Can give results that are in better
agreement with station data than reanalsis.
9Reconstruction for the 20th century
- Reconstruct sea ice thickness for the whole 20th
century - - have to use ocean-sea ice model
- - needs atmospheric forcing
- - reconstructed forcing has to be validated
- Reconstruction of forcing
- redundancy analysis linking NCEP with
observational data (station data and gridded
data) - validation for periods where comprehensive
datasets are available - validation using sea ice simulation and
observed sea ice extent for the 20th century - The method yields pairs of patterns of the
predictor (station data) and the predictand
(model grid) in which the predictand pattern is
optimized to represented the highest possible
variance in the fitting period.
10AWI-wichtigste Daten
Station data from 1900 to 1997
Kauker, Köberle, Gerdes Karcher, JGR, 2009
Number of missing monthly values (1900 - 1997)
for surface air temperature
11AWI-wichtigste Daten
2nd redundancy mode for two SAT predictor
datasets
AARI data
AICSEX/IARC data
12AWI-wichtigste Daten
Explained variance in SLP
Fitting period
Validation period
13AWI-wichtigste Daten
Simulated and observed ice extent
14AWI-wichtigste Daten
Simulated and observed ice extent anomalies in
the East Siberian Sea
Observed extent from Polyakov et al., 2003
151930s warm anomaly
zonally averaged SAT anomalies (Johannesen et
al., 2004)
16merge iarc_tryck hadslp1.0-240 mslpg120
fit3
val1
val2
val
17merge iarc_tryck hadslp1.0-240 mslpg120
iarc_tryck
hadslp1.0-240
mslpg
mslpg-meanropts
Expl. Var
18merge iarc_tryck hadslp1.0-240 mslpg120
19Sea ice thickness reconstruction
Trend 110 km3/a
10 km3/a
20CMIP3 vs. NAOSIM sea ice volume trends
21AWI-wichtigste Daten
Climate models underestimate the sea ice volume
trend
22The 20th Century Reanalysis Project
- Jeff Whitaker, Gil Compo, Nobuki Matsui and
Prashant Sardesmukh - NOAA/ESRL and Univ. of Colorado/CIRES
23The 20th Century Reanalysis
- What
- A 6-hourly reanalysis from 1892-present
(1918-1949 done so far), using only surface
pressure observations. - Why
- No daily gridded tropospheric-wide circulation
dataset before 1948 exists. - Evaluate models, understand causes for 20th
century climate variations (e.g. 30s U.S.
drought, 20-40s polar warming). - How
- 56 member Ensemble Kalman Filter, T26L28 CFS03
model. - Includes analysis error estimate.
24Feasibility OSE
- Subset of operational ps obs for DJF 2004/2005.
- EnKF with CFS at T62, 3DVar and 4DVar with ECMWF
IFS at T159 (courtesy Jean-Noel Thepaut). - OSE with 1998 GFS in Feb 2006 BAMS.
25EnKF Error34 m
NCEP Operational
EC 4DVar Error31 m
EC 3DVar Error104 m
26Mean and Spread Dec 1, 1918-1949
271918-1948 24-h forecast skill
281918-1948 24-h forecast skill
291918-1948 24-h forecast skill
30Uncertainty estimate (blue actual O-F, red
expected O-F)
31T700 Verification - Independent Obs(courtesy S.
Bronniman and A. Grant, ETH)
MAE 1.58 K Expected Error 1.71 K
MAE 1.59 K Expected Error 1.73 K
Assumes observation error of 1.5 K
32Z500 Verification - Independent Ob(courtesy S.
Bronniman and A Grant, ETH)
MAE 25.8 m Expected Error 23.7 m
Assumes observation error of 20 m
33Sep 1938 New England Hurricane
341930s U.S. Drought(Precip)
Analyzed Anomalies (1918-1948 base period) with
Z500 field
Observed Anomalies (1895-2000 base period)
351930s U.S. Drought(Precip)
Analyzed Anomalies (1918-1948 base period) with
MSLP field
Observed Anomalies (1895-2000 base period)
361930s U.S. Drought(Temperature)
Analyzed Anomalies (1918-1948 base period) with
Z500 field
Observed Anomalies (1895-2000 base period)
37(No Transcript)
38FIG. 2. Comparison of analyses of 0000 UTC 20 Dec
2001 500-hPa geopotential height from (top left)
full NCEPNCAR reanalysis using all available
observations at all levels (gt 150,000) and
parallel assimilation experiments with a
simulated 1895 network of only 308 surface
pressure observations from (top right) EnsClim
(rms difference with full NCEPNCAR reanalysis is
95.7 m), (bottom left) EnsFilt (rms difference
with full reanalysis is 49.2 m), and (bottom
right) CDAS-SFC (rms differencewith full
reanalysis is 96.0 m). Blue dots indicate the
location of the surface pressure observations
used to make the experimental analyses.The
5500-m line is thickened, and the contour
interval is 50 m.
39Summary
- Accuracy Mid-tropospheric circulation fields
about as accurate as a 3-day forecast today. - Timeline 1918-1949 done, full 1892-present done
by end of 2008. - Data Access Will be freely available from NCAR,
NOAA/ESRL and NOAA/NCDC. 1918-1949 in early
2008, rest late 2008/early 2009. - For status updates, email jeffrey.s.whitaker_at_noaa.
gov or gilbert.p.compo_at_noaa.gov
40Twentieth Century Reanalysis (V1)
- Objectively-analyzed weather maps with
uncertainty - 6-hourly, daily average, monthly values for 1908
1958 - 2o by 2o, global grid
- The analysis is performed with Ensemble Filter
(Compo et al., 2006). - Observations of surface pressure and sea level
pressure from the International Surface Pressure
Databank version1.1 and ICOADS version 2.4 were
assimilated every six hours.
http//www.cdc.noaa.gov/data/gridded/data.20thC_Re
an.html
41Surface temperature April 1910
42Arctic methods for evaluating simulations
43Fram Strait 10 years timeseries
44Changes in Arctic hydrography
Difference fwc 2007 - 2006
Changes ... in fwc ... in Atlantic Water
properties ... in river water distribution ... in
sea ice formation ... in Pacific Water pathways
45AWI-wichtigste Daten
Decreasing ice thickness in the transpolar drift
Haas et al., 2008
46AWI-wichtigste Daten
Großräumige Verteilungen aus Computermodellen
North Atlantic-Arctic Ocean-Sea Ice Model
(NAOSIM) Im Gegensatz zu den Klimamodellen
werden hier Beobachtungen der Atmosphäre
berücksichtigt (hindcast-Simulationen).
47Tracers 18O (meteoric water, run-off) Radioact
ive tracers (Atlantic Water) Silicate (Pacific
Water)
48Use of cost function of adjoint NAOSIM
49Difference in 100m salinity (2080-2100)
(1980-2000) CCSM (20C3M, A1B, run1)
50Difference in surface salinity (2080-2100)
(1980-2000) (20C3M, A1B, run1)
4
0
-4
CCSM
MPI
51Fresh water content (rel. 35) (2080 2100)
(1980 2000)
CCSM
MPI
52AOMIP status
53AOMIP coordinated activities to improve models
and model predictions
- Proshutinsky1, R. Gerdes2, D. Holland3, G.
Holloway4 and M. Steele5 - Synthesis to identify consistent errors across
models, propose solutions, and find the most
suitable and reliable coupled ice-ocean models
for use in fully coupled regional and global
climate models - Process studies to improve models, investigate
processes using model results and observations.
In particular, AOMIP focuses on How to better
model the arctic halocline which creates the
stratification necessary to insulate perennial
sea ice from the Atlantic Water layer? How to
avoid restoring and flux correction? What is the
role of different mechanisms influencing heat
fluxes in the ocean - sea-ice - atmosphere
system? - AOMIP also focuses on fresh water and heat
problems to answer the fundamental questions how
does the fresh water/heat enter the Arctic Ocean
system? How does it move about which includes
phase changes, and how does it finally exit the
system? - Under the process studies theme, AOMIP
furthermore investigates the role of tides in
Arctic climate, parameterization of stress-driven
and convection-driven mixing and the role of
small- meso- and large-scale turbulence (eddies
and gyres). - The major contributors of the global change in
Arctic climate are changes associated with
atmospheric conditions and in the changes brought
to the Arctic with the Atlantic water. The latter
was the major topic of recent AOMIP studies and
AOMIP will continue working with the Atlantic
water role in the Arctic and global climate
interaction.
54AOMIP coordinated experiments
Bering Strait volume, heat and salt
fluxes Canada Basin shelf-basin exchange and
mechanisms  Pacific water circulation (origin,
forcing, pathways) Â Canada basin major
mechanisms of halocline formation and
variability Circulation and fate of fresh water
from river runoff (pathways and seasonal
transformation due to mixing and freezing)
55AOMIP coordinated experiments (cont.)
Beaufort Gyre mechanisms of fresh water
accumulation and release (origin of the BG
freshwater reservoir, sources and sinks, role of
sea ice dynamics and seasonal transformations,
Ekman pumping) Fresh water balance of the Arctic
Ocean seasonal and interannual variability
(sources, sinks, pathways) Fresh water regional
studies diversion of liquid FW north of Fram
Strait and impact of this on sea ice Atlantic
water circulation (circulation patterns,
variability and heat exchange, model validation
based on observations) Â Ecosystem
experiments Data assimilation and numerical
methods
56AOMIP activities
- AOMIP collaborators were invited to organize a
session in MOCA-09 (IAMAS, IAPSO and IACS Joint
Assembly, to be held in July 19-29, 2009 in
Montréal, Québec, Canada). Prior to that
assembly, AOMIP collaborators are also
participating in the modeling workshop Arctic
System Modeling Workshop III (International
Collaboration in Arctic System Modeling) to be
held on July 16-17, at the University of Quebec
at Montreal (UQAM) - http//www.iarc.uaf.edu/workshops/2009/arctic_syst
em_model_09/ - 2. The AOMIP participants agreed to meet again
in fall 2009 (October 21-23, 2009), at Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution to report about
numerical experiments and other project results
57AOMIP WGOMD collaboration
- Take advantage of
- Regional expertise in key region
- Global exchanges, esp. Bering Strait CAA/Fram
Strait - Identical forcing fields (CORE II)
- Data repository/postprocessing
58Ende
Ende
Foto L. Tadday