A Twenty-Year Dynamical Oceanic Climatology: 1994-2013. Part 2: Velocities, Property Transports, Meteorological Variables, Mixing Coefficients

This is Part 2 of a series of preprints describing a twenty-year dynamical oceanic climatology derived from ECCO version 4, release 3. The associated fields will be made available on the ECCO data server (http://ecco-group.org). The World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) was created to produce th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: The ECCO Consortium
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109847
Description
Summary:This is Part 2 of a series of preprints describing a twenty-year dynamical oceanic climatology derived from ECCO version 4, release 3. The associated fields will be made available on the ECCO data server (http://ecco-group.org). The World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) was created to produce the first truly climatologically useful picture of the ocean circulation and its variability. This goal is addressed here from the state estimate of the Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean (ECCO) consortium, which uses almost all of the data obtained during WOCE and its aftermath along with the much improved general circulation modeling capabilities. A dynamically and data-consistent, state estimate is available depicting the ocean and its ice-cover over a 24-year time-span, globally, from the sea surface to the sea floor. The resulting time-dependent 20-year long climatology includes temperature, salinity, surface elevation, bottom pressure, sea-ice, and three components of velocity. Accompanying the state estimate are modified estimates of meteorological forcing-fields, ocean interior mixing coefficients, and initial conditions. Much spatial structure persists through the two-decade averaging. Results here are primarily pictorial in nature, intended to give the wider community a sense of what is now available and useful and where more detailed analysis would be fruitful. An extended reference list is included. Supported by NASA's Physical Oceanography and Modeling, Analysis and Prediction programs for the ECCO Consortium at MIT, AER, JPL. We thank all of the people, scientists, engineers, ships’ crews, program managers, who finally made possible the gathering of global ocean data, as well as all those who have worked on the ECCO system and models.