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Observations Supporting Decadal Predictions. Roger Lukas University of Hawaii. Climate Research Committee Forum on Decadal Predictability. 12/2/2008. Observations Supporting Decadal Predictions.
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Observations Supporting Decadal Predictions Roger LukasUniversity of Hawaii Climate Research Committee Forum on Decadal Predictability 12/2/2008
Observations Supporting Decadal Predictions • Focus here is on decadal prediction initialization, but we must also consider prediction validation and model improvement • Assimilation formalisms provide initial state estimates from observationsand a framework for assessing model errors relative to observational errors
Altimeter Altimeter T/S XBT XBT SST SST Moorings Moorings Oke et al. Assimilated and with-held observations Assimilated observations • Observing System Experiments (OSEs) • Assimilate real observations • Systematically with-hold observation types Evaluation/ Validation Forecast or BGF Analysis or Forecast T/S GODAE Final Symposium, 12 – 15 November 2008, Nice, France
Overview • Focus on ocean state initialization • Identified source of decadal predictability in some models • Oceanic impacts (fisheries, coastal inundation, shipping) • Status of ocean components of climate observing system • Identify some gaps and weaknesses • Discuss strategy for enhanced observational impacts on decadal time scales • A few requirements
Ocean observing systems have advanced in the last decade • In situ surface meteorology + scatterometer + SST • Global sea level through altimetry and in situ gauges • Tropical moored arrays • TAO, Triton, Pirata implemented in Pacific and Atlantic • Under development in Indian Ocean • Argo float array • RAPID/MOCHA 26°N AMOC • OceanSITES (time-series stations) • NSF: HOT + BATS • NOAA: Atlantic and Pacific ORS moorings
Initial Global Ocean Observing System for Climate Status against the GCOS Implementation Plan and JCOMM targets Total in situ networks 60% February 2008 87% 100% 62% 81% 100% 43% 79% 24% 48% Milestones Drifters 2005 Argo 2007
October 2008 Volunteer Observing Ship surface met on GTS – in decline
October 2008 drifting buoy and moored buoy surface met on GTS Filling VOS gaps
Sea Level • Tide gauges + altimeters • ENSO • Integral constraints on heat content • global rise rate • Marginally eddy-resolving • Understanding decadal sea level variations is problematic – spatial variability is large • Salinity contributions not well constrained • Deep water mass variations may be important • Eddies may be important feedbacks on WBCs (~50% of decadal fluctuations), but can’t be initialized
Decadal change of N. Atl. MOC at 26N estimated by an ECCO-GODAE product (Wunsch & Heimbach 2006) • Complex vertical structure: • Weakening northward transport above 1000 m • Strengthening southward transport of NADW • Strengthening northward transport of abyssal water • No significant decrease of northward heat transport (upper-ocean warming enhances vertical temperature gradient to offset weakening of upper MOC). • Opposite trends of MOC strength at 26N & 50N.
Argo floats March 2008 Note dots are larger than mesoscale eddies
Interior ocean float coverage good, boundaries not so good September 2008
Increasing demand on float power; duration and reliability • Biogeochemical sensors (e.g. oxygen, fluorometer, …) • Sampling upper few meters requires additional sensors • Deeper profiling • Ice detection
More Argo floats needed Smith et al. (2007) “… improvements in DePreSys relative to NoAssim on decadal time scales result mainly from initializing H.” “Furthermore, a substantial increase in the number of subsurface ocean observations through the Argo program should substantially improve our ability to initialize the ocean in future …” Signal/noise requires more profiles in space/time to reduce aliasing noise
AMOC • Great progress with AMOC (RAPID/MOCHA array) • Need more measurements to partition effects of AMOC constituent variations Church (2007, Science)
Energetic high frequency variations LF ~mass balance Array concept works Kanzow et al. (2007)
AMOC is difference between two large noisy numbers Cunningham et al. (2007)
A complete AMOC observing system would include: • The Nordic Sea overflows • Production and export of dense waters from the Labrador Sea • The time varying strength of the AMOC in the subpolar North Atlantic following vertical entrainment and mixing processes • The time varying strength of the AMOC in the subtropical North Atlantic (e.g., RAPID). • The time varying strength of the AMOC in the subtropical South Atlantic. US CLIVAR report 2008-1
Some Obvious Observational Weaknesses(NOT prioritized) • AMOC meridional structure, deep convection regions • Boundary currents • US (NSF/OOI and NOAA/IOOS) • South Atlantic; W. Pacific • LLWBCs • Surface salinity (and global rainfall) • Deep thermohaline structure (>2000 m) • High latitude time-series generally • NSF/OOI plans: Station PAPA, Irminger Sea, SP (55S/90W)
Strategy for Observations supporting Decadal Predictions • We can’t get many more new realizations so need to consider observational strategy • Paleo can help extend temporal coverage, but need observations to calibrate proxies • Limited DoF in time may be overcome to some extent by DoF in space • Need multivariate time-series for validation DoF = degrees of freedom
Requirements for Observations supporting Decadal Predictions • Need to improve surface forcing estimates going forward, and reanalyses • Consistent, accurate instrument calibrations are crucial • Need more integral constraints • e.g. surface salinity is an integral constraint and errors don’t directly feedback onto atmosphere (Aquarius satellite mission + in situ) • e.g. regional tomography array for deep convection regions • Careful observing system experiments e.g. Oke et al. and Lee et al. (Nov 2008, GODAE Final Symposium)
Oke et al.: OSEs and OSSEs Simulated observations Assimilated “observations” • Observing System Experiments (OSEs) • Assimilate real observations • Systematically with-hold observation types Evaluation/ Validation Forecast or BGF Analysis or Forecast • Observing System Simulation Experiments (OSSEs) • Assimilate pretend “observations” … from a model • Systematically include different observation types … including future observation types GODAE Final Symposium, 12 – 15 November 2008, Nice, France
Some Conclusions • We are not oversampling the ocean • Prioritizing gaps relative to decadal prediction requires better understanding and models • Shouldn’t neglect decadal signals that could add prediction skill • Decadal variations arising from tropics? • Decadal variations of midlatitude Pacific? • Harder to sustain/improve existing observing systems than to start new ones • research funding is entrepreneurial • transition from research to operations • Must build multi-decadal time-series for the future
Contributors • Bob Weller • Bill Johns • Bo Qiu • Detlef Stammer • Bruce Cornuelle • Niklas Schneider • Axel Timmermann