scholarly journals Sub-basin-scale sea level budgets from satellite altimetry, Argo floats and satellite gravimetry: a case study in the North Atlantic Ocean

Ocean Science ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1179-1203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Kleinherenbrink ◽  
Riccardo Riva ◽  
Yu Sun

Abstract. In this study, for the first time, an attempt is made to close the sea level budget on a sub-basin scale in terms of trend and amplitude of the annual cycle. We also compare the residual time series after removing the trend, the semiannual and the annual signals. To obtain errors for altimetry and Argo, full variance–covariance matrices are computed using correlation functions and their errors are fully propagated. For altimetry, we apply a geographically dependent intermission bias [Ablain et al.(2015)], which leads to differences in trends up to 0.8 mm yr−1. Since Argo float measurements are non-homogeneously spaced, steric sea levels are first objectively interpolated onto a grid before averaging. For the Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment (GRACE), gravity fields full variance–covariance matrices are used to propagate errors and statistically filter the gravity fields. We use four different filtered gravity field solutions and determine which post-processing strategy is best for budget closure. As a reference, the standard 96 degree Dense Decorrelation Kernel-5 (DDK5)-filtered Center for Space Research (CSR) solution is used to compute the mass component (MC). A comparison is made with two anisotropic Wiener-filtered CSR solutions up to degree and order 60 and 96 and a Wiener-filtered 90 degree ITSG solution. Budgets are computed for 10 polygons in the North Atlantic Ocean, defined in a way that the error on the trend of the MC plus steric sea level remains within 1 mm yr−1. Using the anisotropic Wiener filter on CSR gravity fields expanded up to spherical harmonic degree 96, it is possible to close the sea level budget in 9 of 10 sub-basins in terms of trend. Wiener-filtered Institute of Theoretical geodesy and Satellite Geodesy (ITSG) and the standard DDK5-filtered CSR solutions also close the trend budget if a glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) correction error of 10–20 % is applied; however, the performance of the DDK5-filtered solution strongly depends on the orientation of the polygon due to residual striping. In 7 of 10 sub-basins, the budget of the annual cycle is closed, using the DDK5-filtered CSR or the Wiener-filtered ITSG solutions. The Wiener-filtered 60 and 96 degree CSR solutions, in combination with Argo, lack amplitude and suffer from what appears to be hydrological leakage in the Amazon and Sahel regions. After reducing the trend, the semiannual and the annual signals, 24–53 % of the residual variance in altimetry-derived sea level time series is explained by the combination of Argo steric sea levels and the Wiener-filtered ITSG MC. Based on this, we believe that the best overall solution for the MC of the sub-basin-scale budgets is the Wiener-filtered ITSG gravity fields. The interannual variability is primarily a steric signal in the North Atlantic Ocean, so for this the choice of filter and gravity field solution is not really significant.

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Kleinherenbrink ◽  
Riccardo Riva ◽  
Yu Sun

Abstract. In this study for the first time an attempt is made to close the sea level budget on a sub-basin scale in terms of trend, annual amplitude and residual time series, after removing the trend, the semi-annual and annual signals. To obtain errors for altimetry and Argo full variance-covariance matrices are computed using correlation functions and their errors are fully propagated. For altimetry we apply a geographically dependent intermission bias (Ablain et al., 2015), which leads to differences in trends up to 0.8 mm yr−1. Since Argo float measurements are non-homogeneously spaced, steric sea levels are first objectively interpolated onto a grid before averaging. For the Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment (GRACE) gravity fields full variance-covariance matrices are used to propagate errors and statistically filter the gravity fields. We use four different filtered gravity field solutions and determine which post-processing strategy is best for budget closure. As a reference the standard 96-degree DDK5-filtered CSR solution is used to compute OBP. A comparison is made with two anistropic Wiener-filtered CSR solutions up to d/o 60 and 96 and a Wiener-filtered 90-degree ITSG solution. Budgets are computed for ten polygons in the North Atlantic, defined in a way that the error on the trend of Ocean Bottom Pressure (OBP) + steric sea level remains within 1 mm yr−1. Using the anisotropic Wiener filter on CSR gravity fields expanded up to spherical harmonic degree 96, it is possible to close the sea level budget in nine-out-of-ten sub-basins in terms of trend. Wiener-filtered ITSG and the standard DDK5-filtered CSR solutions also close the trend budget, if a Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) correction error of 10–20 % is applied, however the performance of the DDK5-filtered solution strongly depends on the orientation of the polygon due to residual striping. In seven-out-of-ten sub-basins the budget of the annual cycle is closed, using the DDK5-filtered CSR or the Wiener-filtered ITSG solutions.The Wiener-filtered 60- and 96-degree CSR solution in combination with Argo lack amplitude and suffer from what appears to be hydrological leakage in the Amazon and Sahel regions. After reducing the trend, semi-annual and annual signals, 24–53 % of the residual variance in altimetry-derived sea level time series is explained by the combination of Argo steric sea levels and Wiener-filtered ITSG OBP.Based on this, we believe that the best overall solution for the OBP component of the sub-basin scale budgets is the Wiener-filtered ITSG gravity fields. The interannual variability is primarily a steric signal in the North Atlantic, so for this the choice of filter and gravity field solution is not really significant.


The Holocene ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 949-965 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Roland Gehrels ◽  
William A. Marshall ◽  
Maria J. Gehrels ◽  
Gudrún Larsen ◽  
Jason R. Kirby ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Delman ◽  
Tong Lee

Abstract. The meridional heat transport (MHT) in the North Atlantic is critically important to climate variability and the global overturning circulation. A wide range of ocean processes contribute to North Atlantic MHT, ranging from basin-scale overturning and gyre motions to mesoscale instabilities (such as eddies). However, previous analyses of eddy MHT in the region have mostly focused on the contributions of time-variable velocity and temperature, rather than considering the spatial scales that are more fundamental to the physics of ocean eddies. In this study, a zonal spatial-scale decomposition separates large-scale from mesoscale velocity and temperature contributions to MHT, in order to characterize the physical processes driving MHT. Using this approach, we found that the mesoscale contributions to the time mean and interannual/decadal (ID) variability of MHT in the North Atlantic Ocean are larger than large-scale horizontal contributions, though smaller than the overturning contributions. Considering the 40° N transect as a case study, large-scale ID variability is mostly generated in the deeper part of the thermocline, while mesoscale ID variability has shallower origins. At this latitude, most ID MHT variability associated with mesoscales originates in two regions: a western boundary region (70°–60° W) associated with 1–4 year interannual variations, and an interior region (50°–35° W) associated with decadal variations. Surface eddy kinetic energy is not a reliable indicator of high MHT episodes, but the large-scale meridional temperature gradient is an important factor, by influencing the local temperature variance as well as the local correlation of velocity and temperature. Most of the mesoscale contribution to MHT at 40° N is associated with transient and propagating processes, but stationary mesoscale dynamics contribute substantially to MHT south of the Gulf Stream separation, highlighting the differences between the temporal and spatial decomposition of meridional temperature fluxes.


Science ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 324 (5928) ◽  
pp. 791-793 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Koeller ◽  
C. Fuentes-Yaco ◽  
T. Platt ◽  
S. Sathyendranath ◽  
A. Richards ◽  
...  

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