Abstract's details
A new set of in-situ tidal constants based on the GESLA dataset
CoAuthors
Event: 2018 Ocean Surface Topography Science Team Meeting
Session: Tides, internal tides and high-frequency processes
Presentation type: Type Poster
Contribution: PDF file
Abstract:
In-situ data are essential for a wide range of applications. In ocean tide models, data from bottom-pressure stations and coastal tide gauges are used for validation purposes as well as for assimilation. The Global Extreme Sea Level Analysis (GESLA) is the latest comprehensive high-frequency sea-level dataset containing 1355 harmonized records collected among 30 different international sources. The DGFI-TUM exploited the 1278 public records to derive at every station the amplitude and phase of 39 tidal constituents and the sea-level trend. A first screening was performed on all records to ensure that no large data gap occur in the timeseries and that all flagged observations are excluded. Subsequently, the sea level trend and the constants of each constituent are computed with the least-squares fit. The results are saved in user-friendly text files, and include additional information on the position of the stations, the estimated error of the fit, and a code that corresponds to the source of the record. This poster provides information on the construction of this dataset. In addition, results and tidal applications are illustrated.