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Combined Ocean-Geodetic Analysis of Global and Regional Ocean Mass-, and Freshwater Transport Divergences D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang (Institut für Meereskunde, Universität Hamburg) C. Böning, J. Dengg, K. Lorbacher (IFM-GEOMAR) M. Visbeck, J. Karstensen, U. Neuman (IFM-GEOMAR)

D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

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Combined Ocean-Geodetic Analysis of Global and Regional Ocean Mass-, and Freshwater Transport Divergences. D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang (Institut für Meereskunde, Universität Hamburg) C. Böning, J. Dengg, K. Lorbacher (IFM-GEOMAR) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Combined Ocean-Geodetic Analysis of Global and Regional Ocean Mass-, and

Freshwater Transport Divergences

D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

(Institut für Meereskunde, Universität Hamburg)

C. Böning, J. Dengg, K. Lorbacher (IFM-GEOMAR)

M. Visbeck, J. Karstensen, U. Neuman (IFM-GEOMAR)

Page 2: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Overarching Project Goals

Use satellite-based data of gravity and altimetry, in situ ocean data, river-discharge and ocean circulation models to determine ocean circulation, its mass transports and mass changes in the ocean.

Central focus: redistribution of mass and freshwater on the seasonal to decadal time scale, its connection to atmospheric and terrestrial water transports and storages, and the oceans role in the global freshwater cycle.

Page 3: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

The GECCO State Estimate Ocean Synthesis, performed over the period

1952 through 2001 on a 1º global grid with 23 layers in the vertical, using the ECCO/MIT adjoint.

The models adjoint (obtained using TAF) is used to bring the model into consistency with most of the available ocean observations over the full period by adjusting control parameters.

Control parameter are the models initial temperature and salinity field as well as the time varying surface forcing, leading to a dynamically self-consistent solution (next step is to include mixing).

Page 4: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Schematic of GECCO Optimization 1952 - 2001

Page 5: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

SSH Drift Changes in SSH on inter-decadal time scale

have been “observed”. Unclear is what is causing them. In fact, the data base is hardly sufficient to infer global and regional inter-decadal sea level trends with any statistical significance.

We can use again the results from the 50-year long ocean state estimation performed in Germany as part of the ECCO project (GECCO) to investigate changes in SSH for the period 1952 through 2001 and infer dynamical causes.

See Köhl and Stammer, J. Clim, in press, 2007 for details.

Page 6: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang
Page 7: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang
Page 8: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

ECCO-50yECCO-50y

Page 9: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Bryden et al. (2005)

Comparison of maximum MOC at 25N with Bryden et al.

(Köhl and Stammer, 2007, submitted)

Page 10: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

K-7Max. MOC 25Max. MOC 25ooNN

Bryden et al. (2005)

ECMWF

Page 11: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

K-7Heat transport 25Heat transport 25ooNN

Page 12: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

The MOVE Array plus RAPID (Neuman, Visbeck, Carstens)

Absolute transport fluctuations below 1180 dbar (across 16 。 N) / 1110 dbar (across 26.5 。 N), combining geostrophic transports and continental slope contributions, as measured by two mooring arrays. The light gray and bold coloured curves represent 2 and 30 day low-passed filtered time series.

Page 13: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Correlation:

OMCT and MOVE: -0.01 GECCO and MOVE: 0.31

Correlation:

2002 2003 2004

OMCT and MOVE: 0.04, -0.01, 0.12

GECCO and MOVE: 0.27, 0.31, 0.50

green:MOVE1red:OMCTblack: GECCO

Page 14: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

r=0.76

r=0.6

r=0.68

r=0.69r=0.74

r=0.54

Page 15: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Seasonal pb Variations

GRACE

GAD

GECCO

OMCT

Amplitude Phase

Page 16: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Vinogradova, Ponte and Stammer, GRL, 2007

STD daily SSH

STD bottom pressure

SSH and pb correspondence ratio

Page 17: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

1/6° Model Resolution

(Serra, Köhl and Stammer, 2007)

Page 18: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Zonally averaged annual mean net heat fluxes (W/m2)

Seasonality of the globally averaged heat fluxes (W/m2)

GECCO

NCEP

SOC

GECCO lies mostly between NCEP and SOC; largest adjustments toward SOC occur in high latitudes. Biggest differences between SOC and other fields during winter

months. (Romanova et al., 2007)

Page 19: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

GECCO

NCEP

HOAPS

Zonally integrated freshwater fluxes (mm/day)

GECCO corrects away from HOAPS and NCEP in subtropics and high latitudes; HOAPS has much stronger ITCZ.

(Romanova et al., 2007)

Page 20: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Amazonas River discharge and corrected freshwater fluxes

Trenberth

GECCO

MIT

Page 21: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

(Stammer, 2007)

Effect of Greenland, Arctic Ice Melting on SSH

Page 22: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

(Stammer, 2007)

Page 23: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Long term trends of the Thermohaline Circulation (Lorbacher

and Dengg, 2007)

Left Figure: Annual mean differences of the streamfunction of the meridional overturning circulation (MOC) are around 5Sv at most while the general structure – maximum transport between 30°-40°N at 1000m depth – does not change significantly.Right Figure: Time series of the MOC at 26.5°N show interannual variability with amplitudes around 2Sv and while the MOC in KAB109 remains almost stable over the five decades the MOC in KAB110 exhibits a 50% (~5Sv) reduction.

Page 24: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

… Sea Surface Height and Ocean Bottom Pressure

Difference between the 5th and 1st decade (1996-2004 minus 1960-1968) of ocean bottom pressure (in cm, equivalent water thickness). (Left and right figure: KAB109 and KAB110, respectively). SSH analyses show the same spatial structure.

Reflection of similar interannual and decadal behaviour of the MOC variability (and since we removed a global mean of the parameters the changes are mainly due to changes of large-scale meridional mass distribution changes)

Page 25: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Some Statistics

Figures: Linear regression between SSH and MOC (in cm/Sv) of monthly mean anomalies (climatological seasonal cycle removed) for the two experiments. Pictures for ocean bottom pressure show similar structures.

Strong linear correlation between SSH and MOC mainly due to the long-term trend.

(Trends of the last decade (1993 to 2004) and an outlook are presented at the poster)

Page 26: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Global Assimilation Future

In collaboration with MIT

MITgcm primitive eq. ocean model

Sea Ice model

Bulk flux formulae

llc (long.-lat.-polar cap) grid

Variable resolution: horiz. (1/3-1°) and vert. (min: 10m; max: 550m)

1948-2007

50 levels, 2x90x90 + 2x90x360 + 2x360x90 horizontal grid points

1800s-2400 s time step

Cube Sphere Topology

Mercator grid telescopic equatorial Arctic cap

Page 27: D. Stammer, A. Köhl, V. Romanova, F. Sigismund, W. Wang

Llc-Model Performance Tornado (2.6 Ghz opteron cluster)

tile size - # cores - elapsed time for 1 yr simulation

(45x45) - 72 - 2:20 h

=> one iteration over 60 years: 30-40 days

Timestep/vert. grid/seaice: factor 8 more expensive

than GECCO-50yr although still a on deg. Model.

=> 1/3 deg. Cube Sphere set-up instead?

Preliminary forward run1948-2007SST and Seaice height

Problems ●Spindown of the gyres ●Decreasing transport through all major passages●Warming of the upper ocean