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Closing the Global Sea Level Rise Budget with GRACE, Argo, and Altimetry Observations. Presented by Eric Leuliette. Requirement, Science, and Benefit. Requirement/Objective Mission Goal: Research the rate and causes and of global sea level rise Science ( contribution to meeting requirement)
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Closing the Global Sea Level Rise Budget with GRACE, Argo, and Altimetry Observations Presented by Eric Leuliette
Requirement, Science, and Benefit Requirement/Objective • Mission Goal: • Research the rate and causes and of global sea level rise Science(contribution to meeting requirement) • Can the observational sea level rise budget be closed? Benefit • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change • Sea level • Global heat budget • Science Teams • Ocean Surface Topography • Argo Science Team • GRACE Science Team
Sea level budget The equation for the sea level budget may be expressed as SLtotal = SLsteric + SLmass SLtotalis total sea level Altimeters: Jason-1, Jason-2, and Envisat SLstericis the steric component of sea level Argo (for the upper layer) SLmass is the ocean mass component GRACE + geocenter + oblateness All fields are processed at STAR
A problem closing the budget? Willis et al. [2008] failed to close the sea level rise budget using a combination of Argo, GRACE, and Jason-1 data Suggested possible systematic errors in the observing systems. Willis et al. [2008] Total sea level
Total sea level from altimetry • STAR supports the development of the Radar Altimeter Database System (RADS) • World’s leading platform for sea level climate data records (CDRs) • Includes latest correction products • Supports STAR’s Cal/Val activities • – Intermission • – Tide gauge • Sea level rise research • – Leuliette and Miller [2009]
Building a climate data record: calibration • Calibration is critical for CDRs. • STAR supports Mitchum (USF) in calibrating altimeters with a global tide gauge network. STAR contributes to the Ocean Surface Topography Science Team cal/val efforts. Jason-1 and Jason-2 special issues Leuliette et al. 2004 Leuliette et al. 2010
STAR steric sea level analysis from Argo STAR produced monthly fields of steric sea level variations using a method that removed WOCE climatology before interpolation Trends in steric sea level 2004 – 2008 The budget analysis in Leuliette and Miller [2009] excluded 2003 because of poor coverage of the Southern Hemisphere
STAR GRACE processing Peltier (2004,2009) Unpublished (Proudman) STAR processes GRACE gravity fields into ocean mass variations • Ocean mass variations observed directly from GRACE have little trend for 2004–2009. • A complete analysis must account for ocean mass changes “masked” by geoid variations from the solid Earth’s response to ice melt since the last ice age (Glacial Isostatic Adjustment, GIA) • Uncertainty in ice sheet history, 20% (?) • Published results differ more than forcing uncertainty
GIA corrections • Uncertainties in the GIA correction is the largest source of error in the observation sea level rise budget • GIA models agree that accounting for GIA changes in altimetry observations adds +0.3 to +0.5 mm/year to globalsea level rise. • The disagreement is amplified for global ocean mass. • – Paulson et al. (2007): +1.0 mm/year • – Peltier (2004, 2009): +1.9 mm/year • STAR is collaborating with solid earth geophysicists to improve GIA models • Horton (University of Pennsylvania) • Tamisiea (Proudman Oceanographic Institute)
Closing the budget Leuliette and Miller [2009] Blue lines: Direct observations Red lines: Inferred from budget equation SLtotal = SLsteric + SLmass
Conclusion: Closing the budget • With our analysis, we can close the sea level rise budget for the period of 2004 to 2009.25. • Demonstrates that the three observation systems can be used for cross-calibration.
Challenges and Path Forward • Continuing science challenges • Argo instrument biases and sampling issues • Variations in glacial isostatic adjustment models • GRACE lifetime and follow-on • Next steps • Basin/regional analyses and impact of Greenland ice melt • Extending time series to the entire altimetry era to understand evolution of sea level contributions • Path into applications/operations • Contribute to the IPCC and sea level community