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Toward a Data Assimilation System for Seamless Sea Ice Prediction Based on the AWI Climate Model
Author(s) -
Mu Longjiang,
Nerger Lars,
Tang Qi,
Loza Svetla.,
Sidorenko Dmitry,
Wang Qiang,
Semmler Tido,
Zampieri Lorenzo,
Losch Martin,
Goessling Helge F.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of advances in modeling earth systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.03
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 1942-2466
DOI - 10.1029/2019ms001937
Subject(s) - data assimilation , sea ice , environmental science , climatology , sea surface temperature , ensemble kalman filter , meteorology , geology , kalman filter , computer science , extended kalman filter , geography , artificial intelligence
This paper describes and evaluates the assimilation component of a seamless sea ice prediction system, which is developed based on the fully coupled Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research Climate Model (AWI‐CM, v1.1). Its ocean/ice component with unstructured‐mesh discretization and smoothly varying spatial resolution enables seamless sea ice prediction across a wide range of space and time scales. The model is complemented with the Parallel Data Assimilation Framework to assimilate observations in the ocean/ice component with an Ensemble Kalman Filter. The focus here is on the data assimilation of the prediction system. First, the performance of the system is tested in a perfect‐model setting with synthetic observations. The system exhibits no drift for multivariate assimilation, which is a prerequisite for the robustness of the system. Second, real observational data for sea ice concentration, thickness, drift, and sea surface temperature are assimilated. The analysis results are evaluated against independent in situ observations and reanalysis data. Further experiments that assimilate different combinations of variables are conducted to understand their individual impacts on the model state. In particular, assimilating sea ice drift improves the sea ice thickness estimate, and assimilating sea surface temperature is able to avert a circulation bias of the free‐running model in the Arctic Ocean at middepth. Finally, we present preliminary results obtained with an extended system where the atmosphere is constrained by nudging toward reanalysis data, revealing challenges that still need to be overcome to adapt the ocean/ice assimilation. We consider this system a prototype on the way toward strongly coupled data assimilation across all model components.

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