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National Ice Center National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Science and Applied Technology Program Program Dr. Michael Van Woert, Chief Scientist

National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

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National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program. Dr. Michael Van Woert, Chief Scientist. weekly. global. manual. Planned Nowcast Product Evolution: “NIC 5 Year Plan”. GLOBAL NOWCAST PRODUCT. CURRENT PRODUCT. daily. global. Science makes the next step to - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

National Ice CenterNational Ice CenterScience and Applied Technology Science and Applied Technology

ProgramProgram

Dr. Michael Van Woert, Chief Scientist

Page 2: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Planned Nowcast Product Evolution:Planned Nowcast Product Evolution: “NIC 5 Year Plan” “NIC 5 Year Plan”

REGIONAL NOWCAST REGIONAL NOWCAST PRODUCTPRODUCT

CURRENT PRODUCTCURRENT PRODUCT

dailynon-globalmanual, some automation

high resolution (<1km)

globalmodel / assimilation-based

low resolution (10 km)

GLOBAL NOWCAST GLOBAL NOWCAST PRODUCTPRODUCT

daily

weeklyglobalmanual

Science makesScience makesthe next step to the next step to NOWCAST products NOWCAST products possible.possible.

Page 3: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Planned Forecast Product Evolution:Planned Forecast Product Evolution: “NIC 10 Year Plan” “NIC 10 Year Plan”

PLANNED REGIONAL PLANNED REGIONAL FORECAST PRODUCTFORECAST PRODUCT

CURRENT CURRENT FORECAST PRODUCTFORECAST PRODUCT

Seasonal (30, 90 day)Non-globalStatistical Model

Climate Indices

GlobalCoupled Dynamical ModelData Assimilation Support

PLANNED GLOBAL PLANNED GLOBAL FORECAST PRODUCTFORECAST PRODUCT

Short-term (24-120 Hours)

regionalmanualheuristic

Science makesScience makesthe next step to the next step to FORECAST products FORECAST products possible.possible.

Page 4: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

PIPS 2.0 Ocean/Ice ModelPIPS 2.0 Ocean/Ice Model Coupled Ice-Ocean Model(Hibler/Cox)

0.28 degree grid resolution(17-34 km)

15 vertical levels

Solid wall boundaries

Ocean loosely constrained to Levitus climatology

Forced by NOGAPS

Initialized with SSM/I

PIPS 2.0 domain. Hatched linesdrawn every 4th grid point

Page 5: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Forecast Skill Scores #1Forecast Skill Scores #1

AA

AASSrp

rf

Af = accuracy of the forecast system

Ap = accuracy of a perfect forecast

Ar = accuracy of a reference forecast

In this formulation SS represents the improvement in accuracy of the forecasts over the reference forecasts relative to the total improvement in accuracy.

Page 6: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Forecast Skill Scores #2Forecast Skill Scores #2

Accuracy defined as:

i

biaiNbaMSE )(2

1),(

),(),(

),(),(

ORMSEOPMSE

ORMSEOfMSESS

Page 7: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Forecast Skill Scores #3Forecast Skill Scores #3

),(

),(1

ORMSE

OfMSESS

SS>0 (skillful) when MSE(R,O) > MSE(f,O). SS<0 (unskillful) when MSE(R,O) <MSE(f,O)

Perfect forecast SS=1; MSE(f,O)=0No forecast skill SS=0; MSE(f,O)=MSE(R,O)

Page 8: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

PIPS 24-Hour Forecast PIPS 24-Hour Forecast ValidationValidation

PIPS much better than climo

But with respect to persistence?

Page 9: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

For More InfoFor More Info

See also – M. Van Woert et al., “Satellite validation of the May 2000 sea ice concentration fields from the Polar Ice Prediction System”, Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing, 443-456, 2001

Page 10: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

NIC Forecast RequirementsNIC Forecast Requirements

Product Resolution Precision Tolerances Range

Ice Concen. 10 km +/- .5 Tenths 0-10/10ths

Ice Thickness 10 km Flag Old Ice (2nd Year and Multiyear +/- 25% Non-Multiyear Ice

0-5 meters

Ice Drift (Speed)

10 km (< 10cm/sec) +/- 5cm (>10cm/sec) +/- 20%

0 – 100 km day-1

Ice Drift (Direction)

10 km +/- 20% 360 Deg

Ice Edge 10 km +/- 10 km N/A

Ice Deformation

10 km +/- 25% of Range +/-5X10-8

sec-1

Fracture (Lead) Orientation

100 km 2 +/- 45o 360 deg

Page 11: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Polar Ice Prediction System 3.0Polar Ice Prediction System 3.0

• Navy ice modeling effort to use Los Alamos C-ICE model for operational sea ice analysis and forecasting

• Plan to couple to Global NCOM Ocean Model

• Provide end-user guidance to Technical Validation Panel

Page 12: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

National Weather Service SupportNational Weather Service Support

Sea Ice

ice free

http://science.natice.noaa.gov/work/ice_con_test.grb

Daily weather in the United States is strongly linked to Arctic sea ice conditions.

Page 13: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

MIZ ModelMIZ Model

• Marginal Ice Zone Model (Maksym - now at USNA)– Thermodynamics model driven by SSM/I data – Validation data obtained on Healy cruise

Ice core thick section from Healy

With Coon and Toudal

1

1

Page 14: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

The ModelThe Model• Free Drift

– 3% of the wind speed– 23° to the right of the wind

• Conserve Ice– Single ice thickness category– 2nd upwind difference scheme– Mass conserving

• NASA TEAM Sea Ice– EASE, equal area grid– 25 km resolution, daily– 435 x 435 elements ~70,000 O & I

• Force with ECMWF wind– 12 hour time step– Interpolated to SSM/I grid: d-2

)()( ECMWFtv F

xcucucc

tttttt

LLRR

)()()()(

)()1(

0)(

cvt

c

),( 12/1 iiR uuu )( 12/1 iiL uuu

iR cc for ,0Ru 1 iR cc for 0Ru

1 iL cc for for ,0LuiL cc 0Lu

Model of c(t) written as a 2-d matrix, A(t)

Dimensions ~70,000 x 70,000 – mostly zeros!

Page 15: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Kalman Filter #1Kalman Filter #1

)()()1(~~ ttt cc f

A

)()()()1( tttt Tf APAP

Forecast step:

C is the prior estimate of the sea ice concentration field (~7,000 elements)Cf is the forecasted sea ice concentration fieldP is the prior estimate of the covariance (~7,000 x 7,000)Pf is the forecasted covariance functionA is the matrix of model coefficients and AT is its transpose (~7,000 x 7,000)~ indicates that the value is an estimate

C(0) is the NASA Team sea ice data for December 31, 2001 [ y(0) ]P(0) is assumed diagonal and equal to 5%

~

Page 16: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Kalman Filter #2Kalman Filter #2

)1()1()1()1(

)1()1()1(

tttt

ttt T

f

Tf

REPEEP

K

)]1()1()1()[1()1()1(~~~ tttyttt ff ccc EK

K is the Kalman gainE is the observation design matrix (1’s on the diagonal)

y is the SSM/I sea ice concentration data vectorR is the noise covariance for the SSM/I data (assumed diagonal and 5%)

Correction Step:

)1()1()1()1()1( ttttt ff PEKPP

Page 17: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Kalman Filter #3Kalman Filter #3

RPP

K

f

f

][ ff ccc y K

• Assume single observation• Assume E=1

For R 0 (perfect obs), K 1 and c y (obs)For R inf (bad obs), K 0 and c cf (model)

Page 18: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Preliminary ResultsPreliminary Results

Initial FieldDecember 31, 2001

ForecastJanuary 04, 2002

ObservedJanuary 04, 2002

White indicates ice concentration >100% (i.e. thickness changes)2 hours per day – 2.7 GHz PC, 512 meg, Windows XP, M/S 4.0

Page 19: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Not Yet CompletedNot Yet Completed

• Careful analysis and selection of P(t=0)• Careful analysis and selection of R(t=0)• Display and analysis of P(t)• Inclusion of controls in the Kalman Filter• Examination of forecast skill• Include an ice thickness equation• Improve satellite-derived sea ice data products• Incorporate data assimilation of sea ice motion

Page 20: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

WindSat/Coriolis MissionWindSat/Coriolis Mission

Passive Polarimetric Microwave Radiometer - Frequencies 6.8 GHz V, H 10.0 GHz V, H, U, V

18.7 GHz V, H, U, V22 GHz H37 GHz V, H, U, V

- Launch Jan 2003 - Naval Res. Lab. - Measure Wind Speed & Dir! - What about sea ice??? Work toward improved ice typing with QuikScat/Windsat: K. Partington, N. Walker, S. Nghiem, M. Van Woert

Page 21: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Sea Ice Data AssimilationSea Ice Data Assimilation

Buoys

Meier, Unpublished

19-Jan-92

50 cm s-1

50 cm s-1

Model Motion

SSM/I Motion OI Motion

50 cm s-1

• SSM/I– Many missing vectors– Noisy

• Model– Often wrong

• Objective Interpolation – Constrains model – Interpolates between data

• Kalman Filter– Moving in that direction

Page 22: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Satellite-Derived Ice MotionSatellite-Derived Ice Motion

• Scatterometer data and radiometer data complement each other in estimating ice motion– Where radiometer has

difficulties, scatterometer does well and visa versa

– Enables complete coverage motion maps

Meier, unpublished

Page 23: National Ice Center Science and Applied Technology Program

Riverdance ends its Arctic run … Riverdance ends its Arctic run … minus the usual encore.minus the usual encore.