Title: The Future of Climate Observations
1 The Future of Climate Observations in the
Global Ocean Dean Roemmich - with John Gould, Jim
McWilliams, Neville Smith, Detlef Stammer, and
Doug Wallace WOCE and Beyond Conference, San
Antonio, November 22
2 The Future of Climate Observations in the
Global Ocean Dean Roemmich - with John Gould, Jim
McWilliams, Neville Smith, Detlef Stammer, and
Doug Wallace WOCE and Beyond Conference, San
Antonio, November 22
- In WOCE we learned that our understanding of the
oceans role in the climate system is
fundamentally data limited. - What follows WOCE should be a serious effort to
address that problem.
3The Future of Climate Observations in the Global
Ocean
- Outline
- Climate-related objectives of large-scale
observations. - The legacies of WOCE and TOGA.
- The present status of implementation and
planning. - The (other) major challenges
- - Observing the boundary currents.
- - Biogeochemical measurements.
- - The convergence of observations and models.
- - The research/operations partnership.
- - Data and information management.
4Ocean Observations for Climate Understanding
and prediction of climate and its variability.
- Heat and hydrological cycles The fundamental
elements of the air/sea/ land climate system are
heat and water. - The ocean reservoir Heat content changes
(seasonal, interannual, decadal) are dominated by
the ocean - including over 90 of the observed
global heat increase in the last 40 years. More
than 96 of water is in the oceans. Ocean
evaporation is the source of 1.3 x 106 m3/s of
rainfall over land. The ocean is also an
important sink for carbon.
- Ocean circulation
The ocean
transports massive quantities of heat and water
on time-scales from interannual to the long-term
mean. Export of heat from the tropics by ocean
circulation is comparable to the atmosphere.
Automatic XBT launcher in Drake Passage
5Climate-related objectives of sustained global
ocean observations
- Provide a basic description of the physical state
of the global ocean, including its variability on
seasonal and longer time-scales. - Reveal processes that influence climate on long
time-scales.
- Provide the large-scale context for regional
process studies of limited duration. - Provide the required datasets for data
assimilation and (seasonal and longer) forecast
model initialization. - Complement the satellite remote sensing systems
with data needed for validation, calibration and
interpretation.
A Canadian Argo float deployment
6TOGA and WOCE legacies in sustained observations
- TOGA
- - pioneered the concept of an integrated
observing system on a basin scale. - - installed long-term tropical observing
networks TAO/TRITON, broad-scale XBT, surface
drifter, sea level. - - provided near real-time public datasets.
- WOCE
- - extended the domain of XBT, surface drifter,
sea level. - - produced a baseline global hydrographic
survey. - - installed additional long-term observations
High Resolution XBT/XCTD network, time-series
stations. - - devised critical new instrumentation (e.g.
profiling float, IMET systems) for sustained
global observations. - - integrated satellite and in situ
observations with models on a global scale.
7The ENSO Observing System includes Moored buoys,
Tide gages, Drifting buoys, VOS network
To measure Sea level, thermal profiles, surface
velocity, surface fluxes (air-sea coupling).
For better understanding and improved
prediction of ENSO phenomona.
8The TAO/TRITON tropical moored buoy array is the
backbone of the ENSO Observing System -
collecting temperature profiles and surface
meteorological data near the equator.
(http//www.pmel.noaa.gov/tao)
Near real-time data delivery The warm SST patch
and westerly wind anomaly show developing El Nino
conditions.
9The Sea Level Network provides data with high
regional value and for calibration of satellite
altimeters to provide global sea surface height.
http//uhslc.soest.hawaii.edu/
High central Pacific equatorial sea level shows
developing El Nino conditions.
10Global Surface Drifter Program
Drifter deployments in 2002. The global drifter
array will increase from about 800 today to 1100
in the next 3 years.
- Surface drifter observations provide a global
database for - describing the mean and variability of the
near-surface circulation. - testing models of the surface layer.
- calibration of satellite sea surface
temperatures.
Drifter data http//www.aoml.noaa.gov/phod/dac/d
ac.html
11Mean surface layer velocity. Square root
of the eddy energy.
12The Broad-Scale Thermal Network
Shipping routes
Broad-scale temperature profiles focus on upper
ocean heat content and thermal variability on
seasonal and longer time-scales.
Temperature profiles in January 1995
(Left) A typical months thermal profiles, XBT
plus TAO. Broad-scale XBT sampling is decreasing
as Argo increases. http//www.nodc.noaa.gov/ GTSPP
/gtspp-home.html
13TOGA and WOCE legacies in sustained observations
- TOGA
- - pioneered the concept of an integrated
observing system on a basin scale. - - installed long-term tropical observing
networks TAO/TRITON, broad-scale XBT, surface
drifter, sea level. - - provided near real-time public datasets.
- WOCE
- - extended the domain of XBT, surface drifter,
sea level. - - produced a baseline global hydrographic
survey. - - installed additional long-term observations
High Resolution XBT/XCTD network, time-series
stations. - - devised critical new instrumentation (e.g.
profiling float, IMET systems) for sustained
global observations. - - integrated satellite and in situ
observations with models on a global scale.
14- Deep ocean repeat hydrography
http//whpo.ucsd.edu/whp_data.htm
- Objectives
- Investigate variability in water mass
inventories, physical and biogeochemical
properties, and renewal rates. - Learn the nature of deep ocean circulation
variability - how it responds to and influences
the global climate system.
15High Resolution XBT/XCTD Network
- Objectives
- measure variability in transport of mass, heat
and freshwater. - determine mean fields and statistics of
variability. - Some lines sampled quarterly for gt10 yrs.
A typical temperature transect includes 300
profiles, with spacing as tight as 10 km in the
Kuroshio. Salinity is estimated from sparse
XCTDs. VOS IMET systems are being
installed. http//www-hrx.ucsd.edu,
http//www.aoml.noaa.gov/phod/hdenxbt/
16Recent results from a single HRX
line Meridional heat transport across the
tropical/ subtropical boundary of the North
Pacific (1-year running mean, Roemmich et al,
JGR, 2001).
ECMWF air-sea flux
Heat transport
Eddy-induced mean overturning circulation from a
model (left, McWilliams and Danabasoglu, JPO,
2002)) and from HRX data (right, Roemmich and
Gilson, JPO, 2001)
Kuroshio transport south of Taiwan, from
individual HRX cruises, using 2 definitions of
the Kuroshios offshore edge (Gilson and
Roemmich, JO, 2002)
17Argo Global snapshots of temperature, salinity
and circulation every 10 days - over 100,000
profiles annually
Argo Network as of November 12, 2002 - 571 floats
15 nations providing floats
An Argo float
Conceptual map of Argo - 3000 floats - in 2005
and beyond. About 2000 Argo floats are already
funded.
18NZ Argo float deployment
Recent (Nov 9) profile from Float 2039
All Argo data are freely available via GTS and
internet. http//www.ifremer.fr/coriolis or
http//www.usgodae.org
19Pacific and Indian deployment plans.
Large numbers of Argo floats will be deployed in
the coming months in all oceans. With most
float-providing nations in the Northern
Hemisphere, the challenge is to populate the vast
Southern Hemisphere oceans in order to produce a
global Argo array.
20Time-series stations
- Time-series data at fixed points complements
broad-scale datasets such as Argo. - Air-sea fluxes of heat, freshwater and momentum.
- Full depth physical and bio/geochemical sampling.
21A WOCE example is the Hawaii Ocean Time-Series
Station, providing shipboard plus moored
physical and biogeochemical datasets.
http//www.soest.hawaii.edu/HOT_WOCE/index.html
22Challenges to effective implementation I. What
is missing from the observing system? Boundary
currents play a key role in the oceans mass,
heat, and freshwater budgets. An observing
system component for BCs is not yet designed.
It will require substantial regional cooperation
- technical, logistical and political. (Left)
Schematic of Pacific Ocean surface circulation,
from Tomczak and Godfrey (1994).
23Boundary current measurements Gliders and other
autonomous vehicle technologies may offer a cost
effective solution for sustained observations of
boundary currents.
Velocity and density from a glider off southern
California (R. Davis)
One of several autonomous gliders under
development.
24A 4-D Glider survey
Port
35oN
Argo floats
WBC
Glider track total length 4000 km (160 d)
follow meanders by seeking isotherm depths
Port
NEC
15oN
LLWBC
25Challenges II. Biogeochemical measurements Can we
systematically introduce new sensors into the
observing system?
- Repeat hydrography and time-series stations have
been the starting points floats and gliders will
be more difficult. - Many new sensors are possible and some have been
tested. - The multi-user aspect of the OS is a critical
selling point, but careful judgements are
necessary for initiating long-term measurements.
Water-catching in the pre-WOCE era (J. Swift).
Float with POC light attenuation sensor (J.
Bishop)
26Challenges III Observations and Models Can the
evolution of the OS be harmonized with the state
of modeling and data assimilation, and the
results used to demonstrate the value of the OS?
- Observations are required to
- Provide data and statistics for model
initialization and data assimilation. - Provide independent information for testing model
results and model processes. - Discover new phenomena not anticipated by models,
thereby stimulating model improvement.
(Above) NCEP net air-sea heat fluxes are adjusted
for consistency with ocean data.
27In addition to satellite data, there is a strong
need for subsurface datasets appropriate for
basin to global scale model testing.
(Above) Maps of SSH variability (RMS) for a 1/10o
Atlantic model (left) compared to blended
TOPEX/ERS data (right) - Smith et al, JPO, 2000.
28Challenges IV The research/operations interface.
- A definition of operational oceanography is
- its objectives and characteristics can be
specified in advance. - it has an indefinite operating life and evolves
cautiously. - its success is judged by contributions with
public. - By this definition, the TAO/TRITON Network is
operational.
For the OS to succeed, it must have vertical
integration (instrumentation development, network
design, implementation, data management,
scientific analysis, data assimilation) as well
as horizontal integration across the observing
system elements. Research objectives of the OS
will be seriously compromised if data collection
is de-coupled from the other functions.
(Right) A TAO/TRITON Buoy
29Why?
- The research community designed and implemented
the present observing system, and has
demonstrated its capacity and commitment for high
quality long-term observations. - Technical improvements continue to expand the
capabilities and efficiency of instrumentation. - While there is need for stability, OS design will
continue to evolve as understanding of sampling
requirements increases. - An operational OS will require full partnerships
between research institutions, instrument
manufacturers, and operational agencies.
A French Argo float
30Challenges V Data and information management. To
serve the needs of multiple users, data
management and delivery systems must become
increasingly sophisticated and versatile - and
they require resources.
Example The Argo Data System provides both near
real-time data for operational applications, and
a scientifically QCed dataset for
research. Argo Global Data Centers merge the
data from all floats and maintain best copy
profile and trajectory data and
metadata. http//www.ifremer.fr/coriolis or
http//www.usgodae.org
Schematic of data flow in Argo
31Summary
- A major legacy of WOCE and TOGA is the creation
of a global ocean observing system for climate. - The global observing system is started but is far
from complete. There are major challenges ahead
for full implementation and maximum value. - We have a one-time opportunity and a
responsibility to society to implement an
efficient and effective observing system of the
oceans role in climate.