Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean

Copyright: 2013 Elsevier. This is an ABSTRACT ONLY. The definitive version is published in Deep-Sea Research Part 1: Oceanographic Research Papers, vol. 80, pp 11-22 Hydrographic data from three research cruises, occupying the GoodHope line in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean, are used to i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hutchinson, KA, Swart, S, Ansorge, IJ, Goni, GJ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2013
Subjects:
XBT
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7465
http://ac.els-cdn.com/S0967063713001131/1-s2.0-S0967063713001131-main.pdf?_tid=e27584ae-ed60-11e3-9164-00000aacb35e&acdnat=1402048792_9f8d0a540ea72d706fcea28c08430772
id ftcsir:oai:researchspace.csir.co.za:10204/7465
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcsir:oai:researchspace.csir.co.za:10204/7465 2023-05-15T18:25:03+02:00 Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean Hutchinson, KA Swart, S Ansorge, IJ Goni, GJ 2013-10 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7465 http://ac.els-cdn.com/S0967063713001131/1-s2.0-S0967063713001131-main.pdf?_tid=e27584ae-ed60-11e3-9164-00000aacb35e&acdnat=1402048792_9f8d0a540ea72d706fcea28c08430772 en eng Elsevier Workflow;12747 Hutchinson, K.A, Swart, S, Ansorge, I.J and Goni, G.J. 2013. Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. Deep-Sea Research Part 1: Oceanographic Research Papers, vol. 80, pp 11-22 0967-0637 http://ac.els-cdn.com/S0967063713001131/1-s2.0-S0967063713001131-main.pdf?_tid=e27584ae-ed60-11e3-9164-00000aacb35e&acdnat=1402048792_9f8d0a540ea72d706fcea28c08430772 http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7465 XBT GoodHope line Temperature bias Inter-comparison study Southern Ocean Expendable Bathythermograph Article 2013 ftcsir 2022-05-19T06:14:24Z Copyright: 2013 Elsevier. This is an ABSTRACT ONLY. The definitive version is published in Deep-Sea Research Part 1: Oceanographic Research Papers, vol. 80, pp 11-22 Hydrographic data from three research cruises, occupying the GoodHope line in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean, are used to identify and quantify Expendable Bathythermograph (XBT) temperature biases. A set of 148 collocated XBT and CTD stations, separated by a maximum distance of <12.5 nm and <10 h, are used in this study. A subset of these comparisons is also investigated. This subset consists of 24 simultaneous pairs where the XBT and CTD stations are within 2.5 nm and 2 h of one another. These simultaneous pairs are extremely rare in XBT bias experiments and provide data set to assess, in deeper detail, the behaviour of the bias. The net bias, which is a product of both the depth offset and the pure thermal bias, is investigated with depth per frontal zone for both the collocated and simultaneous comparisons and found to be on the whole positive, meaning warmer XBT readings compared to the CTD values at each depth. The total mean bias for all collocated pairs was found to be 0.101±0.024 °C, and for the simultaneous subset the net bias had a mean value of 0.130±0.064 °C. An investigation into the magnitude of the depth offset was also undertaken, exposing generally positive depth biases, thereby indicating an overestimation of depth by the fall rate equation. A sizeable variation in bias between frontal zones is observed, along with an expected increase of net bias in regions of steeper temperature gradient. The contribution of the pure thermal bias is explored and found to be comparatively small yet still sizeable (mean bias=0.053±0.063 °C). Results found in this study further support the hypothesis of the regional dependence of the XBT fall rate on water temperature, and thus water viscosity. In addition, results obtained here highlight the need to develop an XBT bias correction scheme specifically appropriate to the Southern ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Southern Ocean Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (South Africa): CSIR Research Space Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (South Africa): CSIR Research Space
op_collection_id ftcsir
language English
topic XBT
GoodHope line
Temperature bias
Inter-comparison study
Southern Ocean
Expendable Bathythermograph
spellingShingle XBT
GoodHope line
Temperature bias
Inter-comparison study
Southern Ocean
Expendable Bathythermograph
Hutchinson, KA
Swart, S
Ansorge, IJ
Goni, GJ
Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
topic_facet XBT
GoodHope line
Temperature bias
Inter-comparison study
Southern Ocean
Expendable Bathythermograph
description Copyright: 2013 Elsevier. This is an ABSTRACT ONLY. The definitive version is published in Deep-Sea Research Part 1: Oceanographic Research Papers, vol. 80, pp 11-22 Hydrographic data from three research cruises, occupying the GoodHope line in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean, are used to identify and quantify Expendable Bathythermograph (XBT) temperature biases. A set of 148 collocated XBT and CTD stations, separated by a maximum distance of <12.5 nm and <10 h, are used in this study. A subset of these comparisons is also investigated. This subset consists of 24 simultaneous pairs where the XBT and CTD stations are within 2.5 nm and 2 h of one another. These simultaneous pairs are extremely rare in XBT bias experiments and provide data set to assess, in deeper detail, the behaviour of the bias. The net bias, which is a product of both the depth offset and the pure thermal bias, is investigated with depth per frontal zone for both the collocated and simultaneous comparisons and found to be on the whole positive, meaning warmer XBT readings compared to the CTD values at each depth. The total mean bias for all collocated pairs was found to be 0.101±0.024 °C, and for the simultaneous subset the net bias had a mean value of 0.130±0.064 °C. An investigation into the magnitude of the depth offset was also undertaken, exposing generally positive depth biases, thereby indicating an overestimation of depth by the fall rate equation. A sizeable variation in bias between frontal zones is observed, along with an expected increase of net bias in regions of steeper temperature gradient. The contribution of the pure thermal bias is explored and found to be comparatively small yet still sizeable (mean bias=0.053±0.063 °C). Results found in this study further support the hypothesis of the regional dependence of the XBT fall rate on water temperature, and thus water viscosity. In addition, results obtained here highlight the need to develop an XBT bias correction scheme specifically appropriate to the Southern ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hutchinson, KA
Swart, S
Ansorge, IJ
Goni, GJ
author_facet Hutchinson, KA
Swart, S
Ansorge, IJ
Goni, GJ
author_sort Hutchinson, KA
title Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
title_short Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
title_full Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
title_fullStr Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
title_sort exposing xbt bias in the atlantic sector of the southern ocean
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7465
http://ac.els-cdn.com/S0967063713001131/1-s2.0-S0967063713001131-main.pdf?_tid=e27584ae-ed60-11e3-9164-00000aacb35e&acdnat=1402048792_9f8d0a540ea72d706fcea28c08430772
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation Workflow;12747
Hutchinson, K.A, Swart, S, Ansorge, I.J and Goni, G.J. 2013. Exposing XBT bias in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. Deep-Sea Research Part 1: Oceanographic Research Papers, vol. 80, pp 11-22
0967-0637
http://ac.els-cdn.com/S0967063713001131/1-s2.0-S0967063713001131-main.pdf?_tid=e27584ae-ed60-11e3-9164-00000aacb35e&acdnat=1402048792_9f8d0a540ea72d706fcea28c08430772
http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7465
_version_ 1766206198022930432