Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies

Atmospheric CO2 is projected to increase for the foreseeable future. The amount of CO2 that remains in the atmosphere is regulated, in large part, by the ocean. As the long-term response to the changing atmospheric pCO2 unfolds, the ocean sink will continue to be modified on seasonal to decadal time...

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Main Author: Gloege, Lucas
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: University of Columbia 2020
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-j3p1-tf92
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/85454.pdf
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.z2syqk 2023-05-15T18:25:59+02:00 Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies Gloege, Lucas 2020-05-06 https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-j3p1-tf92 https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/85454.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/ en eng University of Columbia doi:10.7916/d8-j3p1-tf92 10670/1.z2syqk https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/85454.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/ other Archimer, archive institutionnelle de l'Ifremer geo envir Text https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_18cf/ 2020 fttriple https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-j3p1-tf92 2023-01-22T18:13:35Z Atmospheric CO2 is projected to increase for the foreseeable future. The amount of CO2 that remains in the atmosphere is regulated, in large part, by the ocean. As the long-term response to the changing atmospheric pCO2 unfolds, the ocean sink will continue to be modified on seasonal to decadal timescales by climate variability and change. The magnitude of this variability is an active area of research. Accurately quantifying this variability is a challenge given the paucity of direct in-situ observations. In order calculate the global air-sea CO2 sink, ocean pCO2 needs to be known, or at least accurately estimated, at all locations at regular intervals. Two approaches to estimate air-sea CO2 flux are, 1) from simulations of the Earth system and 2) data gap-filling mapping techniques. The goals of this thesis are to 1) rigorously quantify errors in a leading pCO2 and ocean CO2 sink mapping technique and 2) to evaluate the efficacy of adding Earth system model based estimates of ocean pCO2 as a first guess into machine learning based mapping techniques. To meet the first goal, we use a suite of Large Ensemble model members as a testbed to evaluate a leading pCO2 gap-filling approach (SOM-FFN). We find that the SOM-FFN performs well when sufficient data is available, but overestimates Southern Ocean decadal variability by about 39%. To meet our second goal, we incorporate Earth system model pCO2 output into machine learning techniques either by adding the output as an additional feature or by post-processing the model output by learning the misfit (misfit=observation-model) and correcting for it. We find that blending model output and observations using machine learning marginally improves prediction accuracy. In addition, we discuss the potential of the learned misfits as a new model diagnostic tool, which can be used to visualize spatiotemporal pCO2 estimates. Taken together, this study has significant implications in the development of carbon monitoring systems, in turn aiding policy making and improving our ... Text Southern Ocean Unknown Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic geo
envir
spellingShingle geo
envir
Gloege, Lucas
Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies
topic_facet geo
envir
description Atmospheric CO2 is projected to increase for the foreseeable future. The amount of CO2 that remains in the atmosphere is regulated, in large part, by the ocean. As the long-term response to the changing atmospheric pCO2 unfolds, the ocean sink will continue to be modified on seasonal to decadal timescales by climate variability and change. The magnitude of this variability is an active area of research. Accurately quantifying this variability is a challenge given the paucity of direct in-situ observations. In order calculate the global air-sea CO2 sink, ocean pCO2 needs to be known, or at least accurately estimated, at all locations at regular intervals. Two approaches to estimate air-sea CO2 flux are, 1) from simulations of the Earth system and 2) data gap-filling mapping techniques. The goals of this thesis are to 1) rigorously quantify errors in a leading pCO2 and ocean CO2 sink mapping technique and 2) to evaluate the efficacy of adding Earth system model based estimates of ocean pCO2 as a first guess into machine learning based mapping techniques. To meet the first goal, we use a suite of Large Ensemble model members as a testbed to evaluate a leading pCO2 gap-filling approach (SOM-FFN). We find that the SOM-FFN performs well when sufficient data is available, but overestimates Southern Ocean decadal variability by about 39%. To meet our second goal, we incorporate Earth system model pCO2 output into machine learning techniques either by adding the output as an additional feature or by post-processing the model output by learning the misfit (misfit=observation-model) and correcting for it. We find that blending model output and observations using machine learning marginally improves prediction accuracy. In addition, we discuss the potential of the learned misfits as a new model diagnostic tool, which can be used to visualize spatiotemporal pCO2 estimates. Taken together, this study has significant implications in the development of carbon monitoring systems, in turn aiding policy making and improving our ...
format Text
author Gloege, Lucas
author_facet Gloege, Lucas
author_sort Gloege, Lucas
title Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies
title_short Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies
title_full Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies
title_fullStr Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies
title_full_unstemmed Global Ocean Carbon Dioxide Flux Mapping Techniques: Evaluation, Development, and Discrepancies
title_sort global ocean carbon dioxide flux mapping techniques: evaluation, development, and discrepancies
publisher University of Columbia
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-j3p1-tf92
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/85454.pdf
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_source Archimer, archive institutionnelle de l'Ifremer
op_relation doi:10.7916/d8-j3p1-tf92
10670/1.z2syqk
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/85454.pdf
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00700/81210/
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-j3p1-tf92
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