1
Skin SST Diurnal cycle in the GEOS Atmospheric Data Assimilation System: diagnostics and validation with tropical moorings Santha Akella 1ú Max Suarez Ricardo Todling 1 ú [email protected] 1 Global Modeling and Assimilation Oce, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Science Systems and Applications Inc, Lanham, MD Introduction The GMAO is developing an Integrated Earth System Analysis (IESA) system which would include a coupled Atmosphere- Ocean (AO) Data Assimilation System (DAS). Central to this AO-DAS is the ability to assimilate for interfacial states: SST, SSS and sea-ice. Since Jan. 24, 2017, the GMAO near-real time Atmospheric DAS has been assimilating for skin SST. Skin SST serves as the lower boundary condition for the Atmospheric GCM used in atmospheric analysis: radiative transfer model air-sea fluxes, ocean state and gas exchange critically depend on it Diurnal Variation Near-surface diurnal warming and cool-skin variations are well known æ unresolved by daily SST datasets. Water temperature Air temperature Figure 1: Time-series of observed temperatures ( o C) during the Arabian Sea Mooring Experiment Skin SST (T s ) in GEOS AGCM 1 Foundation SST (T d ) and sea-ice fraction are prescribed from OSTIA 2 T s = T d + ΔT w ΔT c ; dT w & dT c are changes in temperature due to diurnal warming and cool-skin respectively 3 ΔT w : a prognostic model based on [TAK2010] is used for diurnal warming; with few modifications described in [ATS2017] 4 ΔT c : cool-skin temperature drop is empirically calculated. ΔT w and ΔT c are shown in Fig. 2(a), (b), respectively (a) (b) (c) (d) Figure 2: Contributions to the 12UTC, Dec 2017, mean Ts calculated within the GEOS ADAS. (a) diurnal warming (ΔTw), (b) temperature drop (ΔTc) due to cool-skin layer, (c) analysis increment in Ts, (d) dierence between Ts and OSTIA SST. Note the dierence in scales, particularly panel (c). Shortwave radiation absorbed within the diurnal warm layer depends on climatological chlorophyll concentration. Ratio of absorbed to incident shortwave in the diurnal warm layer. Figure 3: Monthly mean of the ratio of shortwave radiation absorbed within the diurnal warm layer to the net surface shortwave radiation for 12UTC, Dec 2017. Contrast this spatially varying ratio to a parameterized shortwave absorption profile that has a constant value of 0.61 Analysis of T s in GEOS-ADAS Analysis: Hybrid 4D-EnVar using the Grid-point Statistical Interpolation (GSI) and the Ensemble Square-Root Filter (En- SRF). The T s analysis is carried out in central analysis using GSI, analysis using EnSRF is being tested. Background innovation Background temperature at observation depth (z ob ): T (z ob )= T d + Y _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [ ΔT w ΔT c (1 zob )0 Æ z ob Æ Cool ΔT w Q c a zobdR d b μs ΔT w <z ob Æ d Warm For satellite radiance observations, penetration depth z ob is set to constant values: z ob = Y _ _ _ _ _ _ ] _ _ _ _ _ _ [ 15 μm all infrared sensors 1.25 mm all microwave sensors Ideally should be calculated based on instrument/channel specifications (e.g., wavelength or frequency). The Community Radiative Transfer Model (CRTM) is used to simulate brightness temperatures and Jacobian, ˆT b /ˆT z . Chain rule: ˆT b /ˆT z =(ˆT b /ˆT s )(ˆT s /ˆT z ) , assume ˆT s /ˆT z ¥ 1 IR: 10 12μm AVHRR- NOAA-18 & MetOp-A provide additional relevant observations T s is analyzed along with the atmospheric state (u, v, p s ,T,q). Analysis increment: T ANA s T BKG s is applied to the GEOS- AGCM via Incremental Analysis Update [B1996], see Fig. 2(c), but over open water only. I Though small compared to the modeled variables (ΔT w and ΔT c ), the analysis increment tries to warm T s . Therefore information from the observations is trying to correct a known diurnal warming model bias which tends to cool-otoo fast in late-evening to sunset [GA2018, ATS2017, W2017]. Impact on other observations We obtained small improvements in the assimilation of cur- rently used IR observations and beyond window channels -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 1 [15.41] 83 [14.38] 118 [13.98] 176 [13.11] 217 [9.99] IASI (METOP-A) Ch. subset Num. [wave length in μm] OMB (-) OMA (- -) Strat T Upper Trop T Lower Trop T Sfc T, H2Ov Ozone CTL AVH tSkin Assim Kpar Assim Sol82 Assim PS81 -0.020 -0.015 -0.010 -0.005 0.000 0.005 0.010 0.015 0.020 AVH tSkin Assim Kpar Assim Sol82 Assim PS81 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 -20 0 20 40 60 80 ΔNum of obs Mean bias correction Difference in Std. Dev from CTL Difference in obs count Mean bias corrected O-B Figure 4: Monthly averaged OBS-BKG statistics for the IASI on Metop-A; statistics computed only over water. CTL used OSTIA SST, did not assimilate for Ts, and AVHRR observations were not used. Impact on air-sea fluxes Figure 5: Diurnal variation in the ΔQnet(W/m 2 ) for April, 2012, between EXP which assimilated Ts, while CTL used OSTIA SST for Ts; Contours show solar zenith angle. Impact on forecast skill Neutral change to the anomaly correlation and forecast RMSE in northern hemisphere and tropics Positive in southern hemisphere, decreased with elevation Figure 6: Anomaly correlation for souther hemisphere extratropics at 850-hPa geopotential height for five day forecasts from 00UTC analyses over April 2012. Current Work Comparison with an independent data set, such as SEVIRI on Meteosat-10, Fig.7 shows good agreement. With following drawbacks: For low wind speeds, the modeled diurnal warming is (too) high There is a rapid decay in diurnal warming, right after sunset [GA2018]. (a) SEVIRI (b) GEOS Figure 7: Comparison of monthly mean diurnal warming from (a) SEVIRI retrieved SST, (b) GEOS-ADAS for September, 2015. A modification of the turbulent diusivity in the diurnal warm- ing model shows promising results in oine experiments, using observed fluxes, over a range of wind speeds, compare panels (c) and (e) in Fig.8. 0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 T 0.17m -T 1.91m ( o C) (a) ZB05 u*(mm/s) 1.25 3.75 6.25 8.75 11.25 0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5 -0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 (b) ZB05 for all u* Obs ZB05 0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 T 0.17m -T 1.91m ( o C) (c) ATS2017 0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5 -0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 (d) ATS2017 for all u* Obs ATS2017 0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5 LMT (hrs) 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 T 0.17m -T 1.91m ( o C) (e) NEW 0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5 LMT (hrs) -0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 (f) NEW for all u* Obs NEW Figure 8: Comparison of modeled (dashed lines) versus observed (solid lines) diurnal warming for the Arabian Sea Mooring Experiment. Top, middle and bottom panels are with the Zeng & Beljaars, 2005, GEOS [ATS2017] and modified scheme, respectively. References [TAK2010]Y Takaya et al., 2010: Refinements to a prognostic scheme of skin sea surface temperature. JGR Oceans. doi:10.1029/2009JC005985 [GA2018] Gentemann, C. L. and Akella, S., 2018: Evaluation of NASA GEOS-ADAS modeled diurnal warming through comparisons to SEVIRI and AMSR2 SST observations. JGR Oceans, 123. doi: 10.1002/2017JC013186 [ATS2017] S Akella, et al., 2017: Assimilation for skin SST in the NASA GEOS atmospheric data assimilation system. doi:10.1002/qj2988 [W2017] J While, et al., 2017: An operational analysis system for the global diurnal cycle of sea surface temperature: implementation and validation. doi:10.1002/qj.3036 [B1996] S Bloom, et al., 1996: Data Assimilation Using Incremental Analysis Updates. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520- 0493(1996)124<1256:DAUIAU>2.0.CO;2 Acknowledgements This research was partially supported by NASA ROSES 2010,

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Page 1: Skin SST Diurnal cycle in the GEOS Atmospheric Data ......Assim Sol82 Assim PS81 00. 020 0.015 References. 010 005 0 000 010 015 020 SDEV (oK) (b) AVH tSkin Assim Kpar Assim Sol82

Skin SST Diurnal cycle in theGEOS Atmospheric Data Assimilation System:

diagnostics and validation with tropical mooringsSantha Akella1†ú Max Suarez Ricardo Todling1

ú [email protected] Global Modeling and Assimilation O�ce, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

†Science Systems and Applications Inc, Lanham, MD

Introduction

The GMAO is developing an Integrated Earth System Analysis(IESA) system which would include a coupled Atmosphere-Ocean (AO) Data Assimilation System (DAS). Central to thisAO-DAS is the ability to assimilate for interfacial states: SST,SSS and sea-ice.Since Jan. 24, 2017, the GMAO near-real time AtmosphericDAS has been assimilating for skin SST.

Skin SST

• serves as the lower boundary condition for theAtmospheric GCM

• used in atmospheric analysis: radiative transfer model• air-sea fluxes, ocean state and gas exchange critically

depend on it

Diurnal Variation

Near-surface diurnal warming and cool-skin variations are wellknown æ unresolved by daily SST datasets.

Water temperature

Air temperature

Figure 1: Time-series of observed temperatures (oC) during the Arabian SeaMooring Experiment

Skin SST (T

s

) in GEOS AGCM

1 Foundation SST (Td

) and sea-ice fraction are prescribedfrom OSTIA

2 T

s

= T

d

+ �T

w

≠ �T

c

; dT

w

& dT

c

are changes intemperature due to diurnal warming and cool-skinrespectively

3 �T

w

: a prognostic model based on [TAK2010] is used fordiurnal warming; with few modifications described in[ATS2017]

4 �T

c

: cool-skin temperature drop is empirically calculated.

�T

w

and �T

c

are shown in Fig. 2(a), (b), respectively

(a) (b)

(c) (d)

Figure 2: Contributions to the 12UTC, Dec 2017, mean T

s

calculated withinthe GEOS ADAS. (a) diurnal warming (�T

w

), (b) temperature drop (�T

c

)due to cool-skin layer, (c) analysis increment in T

s

, (d) di�erence betweenT

s

and OSTIA SST. Note the di�erence in scales, particularly panel (c).

Shortwave radiation absorbed within the diurnal warm layerdepends on climatological chlorophyll concentration. Ratio ofabsorbed to incident shortwave in the diurnal warm layer.

Figure 3: Monthly mean of the ratio of shortwave radiation absorbed withinthe diurnal warm layer to the net surface shortwave radiation for 12UTC,Dec 2017.

Contrast this spatially varying ratio to a parameterizedshortwave absorption profile that has a constant value of 0.61(for a 2m deep layer).

Analysis of T

s

in GEOS-ADAS

Analysis: Hybrid 4D-EnVar using the Grid-point StatisticalInterpolation (GSI) and the Ensemble Square-Root Filter (En-SRF).The T

s

analysis is carried out in central analysis using GSI,analysis using EnSRF is being tested.

Background innovation

Background temperature at observation depth (zob

):

T (zob

) = T

d

+Y_______]

_______[

�T

w

≠ �T

c

(1 ≠ z

ob

) 0 Æ z

ob

Æ ” Cool�T

w

≠Q

caz

ob

≠”

d≠”

R

dbµ

s �T

w

” < z

ob

Æ d Warm

For satellite radiance observations, penetration depth z

ob

isset to constant values:

z

ob

=Y______]

______[

15 µm all infrared sensors1.25 mm all microwave sensors

Ideally should be calculated based on instrument/channelspecifications (e.g., wavelength or frequency).

• The Community Radiative Transfer Model (CRTM) is usedto simulate brightness temperatures and Jacobian, ˆT

b

/ˆT

z

.

Chain rule: ˆT

b

/ˆT

z

= (ˆT

b

/ˆT

s

) (ˆT

s

/ˆT

z

) , assumeˆT

s

/ˆT

z

¥ 1• IR: 10 ≠ 12µm AVHRR- NOAA-18 & MetOp-A provide

additional relevant observations

T

s

is analyzed along with the atmospheric state (u, v, p

s

, T, q).Analysis increment: T

ANA

s

≠ T

BKG

s

is applied to the GEOS-AGCM via Incremental Analysis Update [B1996], see Fig. 2(c),but over open water only.I Though small compared to the modeled variables (�T

w

and �T

c

), the analysis increment tries to warm T

s

. Thereforeinformation from the observations is trying to correct a knowndiurnal warming model bias which tends to cool-o� too fast inlate-evening to sunset [GA2018, ATS2017, W2017].

Impact on other observations

We obtained small improvements in the assimilation of cur-rently used IR observations and beyond window channels

�0.3

�0.2

�0.1

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

Mean (oK)

1 [15.41]

83 [14.38]

118 [13.98]

176 [13.11]

217 [9.99]

IAS

I(M

ETO

P-A

)Ch.

subs

etN

um.[

wav

ele

ngth

inµ

m]

OMB (-)OMA (- -)

Strat T

Upper Trop T

Lower Trop T

Sfc T, H2Ov

Ozone

(a)

CTLAVHtSkinAssim KparAssim Sol82Assim PS81

�0.02

0

�0.01

5

�0.01

0

�0.00

50.00

00.00

50.01

00.01

50.02

0

�SDEV (oK)

(b)

AVHtSkinAssim KparAssim Sol82Assim PS81

�0.8

�0.6

�0.4

�0.2

0.0

0.2

0.4

Mean Bias Correction (oK)

(c)

�20 0 20 40 60 80

� Num of obs

(d)

Meanbias

correction

Differencein

Std. Devfrom CTL

Differencein

obscount

Meanbias

correctedO-B

Figure 4: Monthly averaged OBS-BKG statistics for the IASI on Metop-A;statistics computed only over water. CTL used OSTIA SST, did notassimilate for T

s

, and AVHRR observations were not used.

Impact on air-sea fluxes

Figure 5: Diurnal variation in the �Q

net

(W/m

2) for April, 2012, betweenEXP which assimilated T

s

, while CTL used OSTIA SST for T

s

; Contoursshow solar zenith angle.

Impact on forecast skill

• Neutral change to the anomaly correlation and forecastRMSE in northern hemisphere and tropics

• Positive in southern hemisphere, decreased with elevation

Figure 6: Anomaly correlation for souther hemisphere extratropics at850-hPa geopotential height for five day forecasts from 00UTC analysesover April 2012.

Current Work

Comparison with an independent data set, such as SEVIRIon Meteosat-10, Fig.7 shows good agreement. With followingdrawbacks:• For low wind speeds, the modeled diurnal warming is (too)

high• There is a rapid decay in diurnal warming, right after

sunset [GA2018].(a)

SEVIRI(b)

GEOS

Figure 7: Comparison of monthly mean diurnal warming from (a) SEVIRIretrieved SST, (b) GEOS-ADAS for September, 2015.

A modification of the turbulent di�usivity in the diurnal warm-ing model shows promising results in o�ine experiments, usingobserved fluxes, over a range of wind speeds, compare panels(c) and (e) in Fig.8.

0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.50.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.4

T0.1

7m

�T

1.9

1m

(oC

)

(a) ZB05

u�(mm/s)

1.253.756.25

8.7511.25

0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5�0.1

0.00.10.20.30.40.5 (b) ZB05 for all u�

ObsZB05

0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.50.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.4

T0.1

7m

�T

1.9

1m

(oC

)

(c) ATS2017

0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5�0.1

0.00.10.20.30.40.5 (d) ATS2017 for all u�

ObsATS2017

0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5

LMT (hrs)

0.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.4

T0.1

7m

�T

1.9

1m

(oC

)

(e) NEW

0.5 2.5 4.5 6.5 8.5 10.5 12.5 14.5 16.5 18.5 20.5 22.5

LMT (hrs)

�0.10.00.10.20.30.40.5 (f) NEW for all u�

ObsNEW

Figure 8: Comparison of modeled (dashed lines) versus observed (solidlines) diurnal warming for the Arabian Sea Mooring Experiment. Top,middle and bottom panels are with the Zeng & Beljaars, 2005, GEOS[ATS2017] and modified scheme, respectively.

References

[TAK2010] Y Takaya et al., 2010: Refinements to a prognostic scheme ofskin sea surface temperature. JGR Oceans.doi:10.1029/2009JC005985

[GA2018] Gentemann, C. L. and Akella, S., 2018: Evaluation of NASAGEOS-ADAS modeled diurnal warming through comparisons toSEVIRI and AMSR2 SST observations. JGR Oceans, 123. doi:10.1002/2017JC013186

[ATS2017] S Akella, et al., 2017: Assimilation for skin SST in the NASAGEOS atmospheric data assimilation system. doi:10.1002/qj2988

[W2017] J While, et al., 2017: An operational analysis system for theglobal diurnal cycle of sea surface temperature: implementationand validation. doi:10.1002/qj.3036

[B1996] S Bloom, et al., 1996: Data Assimilation Using IncrementalAnalysis Updates. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0493(1996)124<1256:DAUIAU>2.0.CO;2

AcknowledgementsThis research was partially supported by NASA ROSES 2010,NNH10ZDA001N-MAP