Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic

Sea-ice, Finite Element Sea-Ice Model, Kalman Filter, Data Assimilation. - The Arctic region is sensitive to climate change. Since the Arctic sea-ice cover influences the surface heat budget of the Earth the observed sea-ice decline is seen as an indication of global warming. Furthermore, the dynami...

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Main Author: Rollenhagen, Katja
Format: Book
Language:German
Published: Univ. Bremen 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1735-0000-0001-31A8-8
https://doi.org/10.23689/fidgeo-285
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spelling ftsubggeo:oai:e-docs.geo-leo.de:11858/00-1735-0000-0001-31A8-8 2024-06-09T07:43:20+00:00 Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic application of the singular evolutive interpolated Kalman filter Rollenhagen, Katja 2008 141 S. application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1735-0000-0001-31A8-8 https://doi.org/10.23689/fidgeo-285 deu ger Univ. Bremen Geophysik doi:10.23689/fidgeo-285 572217013 http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1735-0000-0001-31A8-8 http://e-docs.geo-leo.de/rights ddc:551 ddc:550 doc-type:book publishedVersion 2008 ftsubggeo https://doi.org/10.23689/fidgeo-285 2024-05-10T04:57:11Z Sea-ice, Finite Element Sea-Ice Model, Kalman Filter, Data Assimilation. - The Arctic region is sensitive to climate change. Since the Arctic sea-ice cover influences the surface heat budget of the Earth the observed sea-ice decline is seen as an indication of global warming. Furthermore, the dynamics of sea ice plays an important role for the sea-ice mass distribution in the Arctic, for the production of dense, cold, and salty water in the Arctic Ocean, which contributes to the thermohaline circulation, and also for the freshwater budget of the Nordic Seas. Thus, a realistic description of sea-ice motion is important to draw conclusions for the mass transport and sea-ice mass distribution. The Finite-Element Sea-Ice Model simulates the large-scale physical sea-ice processes like the sea-ice growth and circulation realistically. The model domain covers the entire Arctic Ocean and its marginal seas. Together with the Singular Evolutive Interpolated Kalman (SEIK) Filter and remotely sensed sea-ice drift observations this sea-ice model is applied for data assimilation to investigate details of the sea-ice dynamics. So far, drift assimilation has been carried out to analyze and modify only the drift field with subsequent computation of the advection or redistribution of ice mass which corresponds more to the physical model behavior than a statistical analysis that the SEIK Filter provides. The sea-ice drift data assimilation with the SEIK Filter achieves drift modification and furthermore changes in the two other sea-ice variables concentration and thickness. The modifications of these "unobserved variables" (within the meaning of data assimilation) are validated and it is found that they are in good agreement for at least 2 months for the sea-ice thickness and even 4 months for the sea-ice concentration which is the longest period examined. The drift improvement is achieved due to the sea-ice concentration and . thesis Book Arctic Arctic Ocean Climate change Global warming Nordic Seas Sea ice GEO-LEOe-docs (FID GEO) Arctic Arctic Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection GEO-LEOe-docs (FID GEO)
op_collection_id ftsubggeo
language German
topic ddc:551
ddc:550
spellingShingle ddc:551
ddc:550
Rollenhagen, Katja
Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic
topic_facet ddc:551
ddc:550
description Sea-ice, Finite Element Sea-Ice Model, Kalman Filter, Data Assimilation. - The Arctic region is sensitive to climate change. Since the Arctic sea-ice cover influences the surface heat budget of the Earth the observed sea-ice decline is seen as an indication of global warming. Furthermore, the dynamics of sea ice plays an important role for the sea-ice mass distribution in the Arctic, for the production of dense, cold, and salty water in the Arctic Ocean, which contributes to the thermohaline circulation, and also for the freshwater budget of the Nordic Seas. Thus, a realistic description of sea-ice motion is important to draw conclusions for the mass transport and sea-ice mass distribution. The Finite-Element Sea-Ice Model simulates the large-scale physical sea-ice processes like the sea-ice growth and circulation realistically. The model domain covers the entire Arctic Ocean and its marginal seas. Together with the Singular Evolutive Interpolated Kalman (SEIK) Filter and remotely sensed sea-ice drift observations this sea-ice model is applied for data assimilation to investigate details of the sea-ice dynamics. So far, drift assimilation has been carried out to analyze and modify only the drift field with subsequent computation of the advection or redistribution of ice mass which corresponds more to the physical model behavior than a statistical analysis that the SEIK Filter provides. The sea-ice drift data assimilation with the SEIK Filter achieves drift modification and furthermore changes in the two other sea-ice variables concentration and thickness. The modifications of these "unobserved variables" (within the meaning of data assimilation) are validated and it is found that they are in good agreement for at least 2 months for the sea-ice thickness and even 4 months for the sea-ice concentration which is the longest period examined. The drift improvement is achieved due to the sea-ice concentration and . thesis
format Book
author Rollenhagen, Katja
author_facet Rollenhagen, Katja
author_sort Rollenhagen, Katja
title Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic
title_short Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic
title_full Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic
title_fullStr Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the Arctic
title_sort data assimilation in a regional finite element sea-ice model for the arctic
publisher Univ. Bremen
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1735-0000-0001-31A8-8
https://doi.org/10.23689/fidgeo-285
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Climate change
Global warming
Nordic Seas
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Climate change
Global warming
Nordic Seas
Sea ice
op_relation Geophysik
doi:10.23689/fidgeo-285
572217013
http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1735-0000-0001-31A8-8
op_rights http://e-docs.geo-leo.de/rights
op_doi https://doi.org/10.23689/fidgeo-285
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