Abstract's details

Accounting for observation error correlations in the assimilation of data from the future SWOT High-Resolution altimeter mission

Emmanuel Cosme (UGA-CNRS/LGGE, France)

CoAuthors

Giovanni Ruggiero (Mercator Océan, France); Jean-Michel Brankart (UGA-CNRS/LGGE, France); Clement Ubelmann (CLS, France); Julien Le Sommer (UGA-CNRS/LGGE, France)

Event: 2016 Ocean Surface Topography Science Team Meeting

Session: Quantifying Errors and Uncertainties in Altimetry data

Presentation type: Type Oral

Contribution: PDF file

Abstract:

Altimetric observations are routinely assimilated in ocean circulation models. Most data assimilation algorithms requires the inverse of the covariance matrix of the observation errors. In practical applications, the cost of computing this inverse matrix with spatially correlated observation errors is prohibitive. Common practices are therefore to subsample or combine the observations so that the errors of the assimilated observations can be considered uncorrelated.  As a consequence, a large fraction of the available observational information is not used in practical applications.

A method is here developed to account for the spatial correlations of observation errors in data assimilation, with a focus on the future Surface Ocean and Water Topography (SWOT) Mission for which the problem will be critical. Technically, the method consists in the transformation of the observation vector so that the inverse of the corresponding covariance matrix can be replaced by the inverse of a diagonal matrix, thus allowing to genuinely take into account errors that are spatially correlated in physical space.

Numerical experiments of Ensemble Kalman filter analyses of SWOT-like observations are conducted with three different observation error covariance matrices. Results suggest that the proposed method provides an effective way to account for error correlations in the assimilation of the future SWOT data. The transformation of the observation vector proposed herein yields both a significant reduction of the root mean square (rms) errors and a good consistency between the filter analysis error statistics and the true error statistics.

The method requires a simulator of the observation errors. The application presented here involves the SWOT simulator initially developed by NASA/JPL. Possible extensions of these developments include the application to nadir-looking altimetry and a better characterization of the error budget of altimetric observations.
 

Oral presentation show times:

Room Start Date End Date
Auditorium Thu, Nov 03 2016,09:45 Thu, Nov 03 2016,10:00
Emmanuel Cosme
UGA-CNRS/LGGE
France
Emmanuel.Cosme@univ-grenoble-alpes.fr