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Using generalized cross‐validation to select parameters in inversions for regional carbon fluxes
Author(s) -
Krakauer Nir Y.,
Schneider Tapio,
Randerson James T.,
Olsen Seth C.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2004gl020323
Subject(s) - environmental science , cross validation , flux (metallurgy) , inversion (geology) , atmospheric sciences , mathematics , statistics , geology , chemistry , paleontology , organic chemistry , structural basin
Estimating CO 2 fluxes from the pattern of atmospheric CO 2 concentrations with atmospheric transport models is an ill‐posed inverse problem, whose solution is stabilized using prior information. Weights assigned to prior information and to CO 2 concentrations at different locations are quantified by parameters that are not well known, and differences in the choice of these parameters contribute to differences among published estimates of the regional partitioning of CO 2 fluxes. Following the TransCom 3 protocol to estimate CO 2 fluxes for 1992–1996, we find that the partitioning of the CO 2 sink between land and oceans and between North America and Eurasia depends on parameters that quantify the relative weight given to prior flux estimates and the extent to which CO 2 concentrations at different stations are differentially weighted. Parameter values that minimize an estimated prediction error can be chosen by generalized cross‐validation (GCV). The GCV parameter values yield fluxes in northern regions similar to those obtained with the TransCom parameter values, but the GCV fluxes are smaller in the poorly constrained equatorial and southern regions.

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