Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator Océan

Since December 2010, the MyOcean global analysis and forecasting system has consisted of the Mercator Océan NEMO global 1/4° configuration with a 1/12° nested model over the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. The open boundary data for the nested configuration come from the global 1/4° configuration at...

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Main Authors: J.-M. Lellouche, O. Le Galloudec, M. Drévillon, C. Régnier, E. Greiner, G. Garric, N. Ferry, C. Desportes, C.-E. Testut, C. Bricaud, R. Bourdallé-Badie, B. Tranchant, M. Benkiran, Y. Drillet, A. Daudin, C. De Nicola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-01-01
Series:Ocean Science
Online Access:http://www.ocean-sci.net/9/57/2013/os-9-57-2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-edf137f39b714fbc8b7322d763b2e3c72020-11-25T02:19:27ZengCopernicus PublicationsOcean Science1812-07841812-07922013-01-0191578110.5194/os-9-57-2013Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator OcéanJ.-M. LelloucheO. Le GalloudecM. DrévillonC. RégnierE. GreinerG. GarricN. FerryC. DesportesC.-E. TestutC. BricaudR. Bourdallé-BadieB. TranchantM. BenkiranY. DrilletA. DaudinC. De NicolaSince December 2010, the MyOcean global analysis and forecasting system has consisted of the Mercator Océan NEMO global 1/4° configuration with a 1/12° nested model over the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. The open boundary data for the nested configuration come from the global 1/4° configuration at 20° S and 80° N. <br><br> The data are assimilated by means of a reduced-order Kalman filter with a 3-D multivariate modal decomposition of the forecast error. It includes an adaptive-error estimate and a localization algorithm. A 3-D-Var scheme provides a correction for the slowly evolving large-scale biases in temperature and salinity. Altimeter data, satellite sea surface temperature and in situ temperature and salinity vertical profiles are jointly assimilated to estimate the initial conditions for numerical ocean forecasting. In addition to the quality control performed by data producers, the system carries out a proper quality control on temperature and salinity vertical profiles in order to minimise the risk of erroneous observed profiles being assimilated in the model. <br><br> This paper describes the recent systems used by Mercator Océan and the validation procedure applied to current MyOcean systems as well as systems under development. The paper shows how refinements or adjustments to the system during the validation procedure affect its quality. Additionally, we show that quality checks (in situ, drifters) and data sources (satellite sea surface temperature) have as great an impact as the system design (model physics and assimilation parameters). The results of the scientific assessment are illustrated with diagnostics over the year 2010 mainly, assorted with time series over the 2007–2011 period. The validation procedure demonstrates the accuracy of MyOcean global products, whose quality is stable over time. All monitoring systems are close to altimetric observations with a forecast RMS difference of 7 cm. The update of the mean dynamic topography corrects local biases in the Indonesian Throughflow and in the western tropical Pacific. This improves also the subsurface currents at the Equator. The global systems give an accurate description of water masses almost everywhere. Between 0 and 500 m, departures from in situ observations rarely exceed 1 °C and 0.2 psu. The assimilation of an improved sea surface temperature product aims to better represent the sea ice concentration and the sea ice edge. The systems under development are still suffering from a drift which can only be detected by means of a 5-yr hindcast, preventing us from upgrading them in real time. This emphasizes the need to pursue research while building future systems for MyOcean2 forecasting.http://www.ocean-sci.net/9/57/2013/os-9-57-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J.-M. Lellouche
O. Le Galloudec
M. Drévillon
C. Régnier
E. Greiner
G. Garric
N. Ferry
C. Desportes
C.-E. Testut
C. Bricaud
R. Bourdallé-Badie
B. Tranchant
M. Benkiran
Y. Drillet
A. Daudin
C. De Nicola
spellingShingle J.-M. Lellouche
O. Le Galloudec
M. Drévillon
C. Régnier
E. Greiner
G. Garric
N. Ferry
C. Desportes
C.-E. Testut
C. Bricaud
R. Bourdallé-Badie
B. Tranchant
M. Benkiran
Y. Drillet
A. Daudin
C. De Nicola
Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator Océan
Ocean Science
author_facet J.-M. Lellouche
O. Le Galloudec
M. Drévillon
C. Régnier
E. Greiner
G. Garric
N. Ferry
C. Desportes
C.-E. Testut
C. Bricaud
R. Bourdallé-Badie
B. Tranchant
M. Benkiran
Y. Drillet
A. Daudin
C. De Nicola
author_sort J.-M. Lellouche
title Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator Océan
title_short Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator Océan
title_full Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator Océan
title_fullStr Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator Océan
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at Mercator Océan
title_sort evaluation of global monitoring and forecasting systems at mercator océan
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Ocean Science
issn 1812-0784
1812-0792
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Since December 2010, the MyOcean global analysis and forecasting system has consisted of the Mercator Océan NEMO global 1/4° configuration with a 1/12° nested model over the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. The open boundary data for the nested configuration come from the global 1/4° configuration at 20° S and 80° N. <br><br> The data are assimilated by means of a reduced-order Kalman filter with a 3-D multivariate modal decomposition of the forecast error. It includes an adaptive-error estimate and a localization algorithm. A 3-D-Var scheme provides a correction for the slowly evolving large-scale biases in temperature and salinity. Altimeter data, satellite sea surface temperature and in situ temperature and salinity vertical profiles are jointly assimilated to estimate the initial conditions for numerical ocean forecasting. In addition to the quality control performed by data producers, the system carries out a proper quality control on temperature and salinity vertical profiles in order to minimise the risk of erroneous observed profiles being assimilated in the model. <br><br> This paper describes the recent systems used by Mercator Océan and the validation procedure applied to current MyOcean systems as well as systems under development. The paper shows how refinements or adjustments to the system during the validation procedure affect its quality. Additionally, we show that quality checks (in situ, drifters) and data sources (satellite sea surface temperature) have as great an impact as the system design (model physics and assimilation parameters). The results of the scientific assessment are illustrated with diagnostics over the year 2010 mainly, assorted with time series over the 2007–2011 period. The validation procedure demonstrates the accuracy of MyOcean global products, whose quality is stable over time. All monitoring systems are close to altimetric observations with a forecast RMS difference of 7 cm. The update of the mean dynamic topography corrects local biases in the Indonesian Throughflow and in the western tropical Pacific. This improves also the subsurface currents at the Equator. The global systems give an accurate description of water masses almost everywhere. Between 0 and 500 m, departures from in situ observations rarely exceed 1 °C and 0.2 psu. The assimilation of an improved sea surface temperature product aims to better represent the sea ice concentration and the sea ice edge. The systems under development are still suffering from a drift which can only be detected by means of a 5-yr hindcast, preventing us from upgrading them in real time. This emphasizes the need to pursue research while building future systems for MyOcean2 forecasting.
url http://www.ocean-sci.net/9/57/2013/os-9-57-2013.pdf
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