The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model

A finite-difference model of the North Atlantic is constructed for the purpose of making an estimate of the circulation through an inverse calculation. The data base is eclectic, and includes hydrography, oxygen, nutrients, current meter and float records, atmospheric momentum, heat and water vapor...

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Main Authors: Martel, Francoise, Wunsch, Carl
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1993
Subjects:
48
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19930068874
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:19930068874 2023-05-15T17:29:14+02:00 The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model Martel, Francoise Wunsch, Carl Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available May 1993 http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19930068874 unknown http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19930068874 Accession ID: 93A52871 Copyright Other Sources 48 Journal of Physical Oceanography; 23; 5; p. 898-924. 1993 ftnasantrs 2012-02-15T20:15:05Z A finite-difference model of the North Atlantic is constructed for the purpose of making an estimate of the circulation through an inverse calculation. The data base is eclectic, and includes hydrography, oxygen, nutrients, current meter and float records, atmospheric momentum, heat and water vapor transfers, as well as estimates of certain integral fluxes. Owing to the available hydrographic database, the model resolution is restricted to 1 deg at best, and is much coarser in many aspects. This limited resolution is a major obstacle to accurate estimates of climatological fluxes. In its final form, there are about 9000 constraints in 29,000 formal unknowns plus 9000 noise unknowns. The system is solved as a tapered least-squares system by a sparse conjugate gradient algorithm. With the exception of a few float velocities, all constraints are found to be consistent within error estimates. The model produces estimates of large-scale fluxes and flux divergences for all conventional properties including heat and nutrients as well as carbon dioxide and alkalinity. Meridional fluxes of carbon are found to be indistinguishable from zero, whereas the North Atlantic tends to export nutrients to the south, but carry heat to the north. Traditional oceanographic depictions of the circulation through combination of nonsynoptic data into steady models may have reached their useful limit in the present calculation, as the conflicts between the data and physical requirements become quantitatively apparent. Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic 48
spellingShingle 48
Martel, Francoise
Wunsch, Carl
The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model
topic_facet 48
description A finite-difference model of the North Atlantic is constructed for the purpose of making an estimate of the circulation through an inverse calculation. The data base is eclectic, and includes hydrography, oxygen, nutrients, current meter and float records, atmospheric momentum, heat and water vapor transfers, as well as estimates of certain integral fluxes. Owing to the available hydrographic database, the model resolution is restricted to 1 deg at best, and is much coarser in many aspects. This limited resolution is a major obstacle to accurate estimates of climatological fluxes. In its final form, there are about 9000 constraints in 29,000 formal unknowns plus 9000 noise unknowns. The system is solved as a tapered least-squares system by a sparse conjugate gradient algorithm. With the exception of a few float velocities, all constraints are found to be consistent within error estimates. The model produces estimates of large-scale fluxes and flux divergences for all conventional properties including heat and nutrients as well as carbon dioxide and alkalinity. Meridional fluxes of carbon are found to be indistinguishable from zero, whereas the North Atlantic tends to export nutrients to the south, but carry heat to the north. Traditional oceanographic depictions of the circulation through combination of nonsynoptic data into steady models may have reached their useful limit in the present calculation, as the conflicts between the data and physical requirements become quantitatively apparent.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Martel, Francoise
Wunsch, Carl
author_facet Martel, Francoise
Wunsch, Carl
author_sort Martel, Francoise
title The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model
title_short The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model
title_full The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model
title_fullStr The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model
title_full_unstemmed The North Atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - An estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model
title_sort north atlantic circulation in the early 1980s - an estimate from inversion of a finite-difference model
publishDate 1993
url http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19930068874
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Other Sources
op_relation http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19930068874
Accession ID: 93A52871
op_rights Copyright
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