Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records

The correction of meteorological observational records (homogenisation) for non climate artefacts is an important task. Very few, long-term meteorological station series are entirely free of non-climatic influences. Climate data homogenization aims to identify and remove these non climate factors. N...

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Main Author: Gillespie, Ian
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/
https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/1/Final%20Thesis.pdf
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spelling ftunivmaynooth:oai:mural.maynoothuniversity.ie:14901 2023-05-15T18:18:51+02:00 Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records Gillespie, Ian 2021 text https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/ https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/1/Final%20Thesis.pdf en eng https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/1/Final%20Thesis.pdf Gillespie, Ian (2021) Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records. PhD thesis, National University of Ireland, Maynooth. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftunivmaynooth 2022-06-13T18:48:47Z The correction of meteorological observational records (homogenisation) for non climate artefacts is an important task. Very few, long-term meteorological station series are entirely free of non-climatic influences. Climate data homogenization aims to identify and remove these non climate factors. Numerous methods of homogenisation have been developed over the decades. Current state of the art approaches generally proceed using pairwise difference series between observations from a network of reference stations and the station under assessment. Such methods work well in well sampled regions such as Europe and North America, but are less successful in poorly sampled regions and epochs. Reanalyses are produced by assimilating available observations into a forecast model, producing complete fields that are consistent with: the input data, the model physics, and any external boundary conditions prescribed. Full-input reanalyses which assimilate data from all available sources have previously been used to homogenise radiosonde data records. This work sets out to investigate if sparse-input reanalysis products that only assimilate surface pressure and use prescribed sea-ice, sea surface temperatures and changes in atmospheric composition, can act as a suitable reference series for the homogenisation of land surface air temperatures and to compare the results to established methods. It is found that sparse-input reanalysis products have successively improved in their quality with each new generation. The most recent product from NOAA-CIRES – 20CRv3 – has comparable overall statistical properties when interpolated to station locations and differenced to pairwise differences. In well sample regions neighbour-based comparisons remain favourable, but in sparser regions and epochs –20CRv3 may be preferable. The 20CRv3 product is therefore used to identify breakpoints and then 4 distinct approaches are used to adjust the series. Two of these directly use the 20CRv3 fields to estimate adjustments, while the remaining pair use ... Thesis Sea ice Maynooth University ePrints and eTheses Archive (National University of Ireland)
institution Open Polar
collection Maynooth University ePrints and eTheses Archive (National University of Ireland)
op_collection_id ftunivmaynooth
language English
description The correction of meteorological observational records (homogenisation) for non climate artefacts is an important task. Very few, long-term meteorological station series are entirely free of non-climatic influences. Climate data homogenization aims to identify and remove these non climate factors. Numerous methods of homogenisation have been developed over the decades. Current state of the art approaches generally proceed using pairwise difference series between observations from a network of reference stations and the station under assessment. Such methods work well in well sampled regions such as Europe and North America, but are less successful in poorly sampled regions and epochs. Reanalyses are produced by assimilating available observations into a forecast model, producing complete fields that are consistent with: the input data, the model physics, and any external boundary conditions prescribed. Full-input reanalyses which assimilate data from all available sources have previously been used to homogenise radiosonde data records. This work sets out to investigate if sparse-input reanalysis products that only assimilate surface pressure and use prescribed sea-ice, sea surface temperatures and changes in atmospheric composition, can act as a suitable reference series for the homogenisation of land surface air temperatures and to compare the results to established methods. It is found that sparse-input reanalysis products have successively improved in their quality with each new generation. The most recent product from NOAA-CIRES – 20CRv3 – has comparable overall statistical properties when interpolated to station locations and differenced to pairwise differences. In well sample regions neighbour-based comparisons remain favourable, but in sparser regions and epochs –20CRv3 may be preferable. The 20CRv3 product is therefore used to identify breakpoints and then 4 distinct approaches are used to adjust the series. Two of these directly use the 20CRv3 fields to estimate adjustments, while the remaining pair use ...
format Thesis
author Gillespie, Ian
spellingShingle Gillespie, Ian
Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records
author_facet Gillespie, Ian
author_sort Gillespie, Ian
title Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records
title_short Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records
title_full Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records
title_fullStr Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records
title_sort investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records
publishDate 2021
url https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/
https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/1/Final%20Thesis.pdf
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/14901/1/Final%20Thesis.pdf
Gillespie, Ian (2021) Investigating the potential use of sparse-input reanalyses to homogenise long-term land surface air temperature records. PhD thesis, National University of Ireland, Maynooth.
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