Unexpected impacts of the Tropical Pacific array on reanalysis surface meteorology and heat fluxes
Unexpected impacts of the Tropical Pacific array on reanalysis surface meteorology and heat fluxes
The Tropical Pacific mooring array has been a key component of the climate observing system since the early 1990s. We identify a pattern of strong near surface humidity anomalies, colocated with the array, in the widely used European Center for Medium Range Weather Forecasting Interim atmospheric reanalysis. The pattern generates large, previously unrecognized latent and net air-sea heat flux anomalies, up to 50?Wm?2 in the annual mean, in reanalysis derived data sets employed for climate studies (TropFlux) and ocean model forcing (the Drakkar Forcing Set). As a consequence, uncertainty in Tropical Pacific ocean heat uptake between the 1990s and early 2000s at the mooring sites is significant with mooring colocated differences in decadally averaged ocean heat uptake as large as 20?Wm?2. Furthermore, these results have major implications for the dual use of air-sea flux buoys as reference sites and sources of assimilation data that are discussed.
Tropical Pacific, heat flux, mooring array, reanalysis
6213-6220
Josey, S.A.
2252ab7f-5cd2-49fd-a951-aece44553d93
Yu, L.
26837fa4-602b-4366-b6e4-0b48297474c7
Gulev, S.
25f95dd3-a6fe-4460-9d8f-3106b392cc49
Jin, X.
e3304174-29e3-4205-b98a-3f76ac7a7f1d
Tilinina, N.
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Barnier, B.
0179fa7c-ed1b-45df-9e81-5a959268d99b
Brodeau, L.
c80ff555-960f-45ab-a3fa-e6c8e27aa48a
16 September 2014
Josey, S.A.
2252ab7f-5cd2-49fd-a951-aece44553d93
Yu, L.
26837fa4-602b-4366-b6e4-0b48297474c7
Gulev, S.
25f95dd3-a6fe-4460-9d8f-3106b392cc49
Jin, X.
e3304174-29e3-4205-b98a-3f76ac7a7f1d
Tilinina, N.
7c5ea55e-005a-4968-bb33-8a4dfcb2dc5a
Barnier, B.
0179fa7c-ed1b-45df-9e81-5a959268d99b
Brodeau, L.
c80ff555-960f-45ab-a3fa-e6c8e27aa48a
Josey, S.A., Yu, L., Gulev, S., Jin, X., Tilinina, N., Barnier, B. and Brodeau, L.
(2014)
Unexpected impacts of the Tropical Pacific array on reanalysis surface meteorology and heat fluxes.
Geophysical Research Letters, 41 (17), .
(doi:10.1002/2014GL061302).
Abstract
The Tropical Pacific mooring array has been a key component of the climate observing system since the early 1990s. We identify a pattern of strong near surface humidity anomalies, colocated with the array, in the widely used European Center for Medium Range Weather Forecasting Interim atmospheric reanalysis. The pattern generates large, previously unrecognized latent and net air-sea heat flux anomalies, up to 50?Wm?2 in the annual mean, in reanalysis derived data sets employed for climate studies (TropFlux) and ocean model forcing (the Drakkar Forcing Set). As a consequence, uncertainty in Tropical Pacific ocean heat uptake between the 1990s and early 2000s at the mooring sites is significant with mooring colocated differences in decadally averaged ocean heat uptake as large as 20?Wm?2. Furthermore, these results have major implications for the dual use of air-sea flux buoys as reference sites and sources of assimilation data that are discussed.
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Accepted/In Press date: September 2014
Published date: 16 September 2014
Keywords:
Tropical Pacific, heat flux, mooring array, reanalysis
Organisations:
Marine Systems Modelling, National Oceanography Centre
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 368649
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/368649
ISSN: 0094-8276
PURE UUID: f80ef59f-7ef6-45bd-9ee3-b5552a1a28c5
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Date deposited: 05 Sep 2014 13:03
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:50
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Contributors
Author:
S.A. Josey
Author:
L. Yu
Author:
S. Gulev
Author:
X. Jin
Author:
N. Tilinina
Author:
B. Barnier
Author:
L. Brodeau
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