Weakly and strongly coupled data assimilation with the coupled ocean-atmosphere model AWI-CM
- Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung, Bremerhaven, Germany (qi.tang@awi.de)
In this study we compare the results of strongly coupled data assimilation (SCDA) and weakly coupled data assimilation (WCDA), and among the different WCDAs by analyzing the assimilation effect on the prediction of the ocean as well as the atmosphere variables. We have implemented the parallel data assimilation framework (PDAF, http://pdaf.awi.de) with the AWI climate model (AWI-CM), which couples the ocean model FESOM and the atmospheric model ECHAM. In the WCDA, the assimilation acts separately on each component in the coupled model and observations of one component only directly influence its own component. The other components can benefit from the DA through the model dynamics. The alternative to WCDA is SCDA, in which the atmosphere as well as the ocean variables are updated jointly using cross-covariances between the two components. Our current system allows both the SCDA and the WCDA. For the SCDA configuration, either the ocean observations (e.g., satellite sea surface temperature, profiles of temperature and salinity) or the atmosphere observations (e.g., air temperature, surface pressure) or both of them can be assimilated to update the ocean as well as the atmosphere variables. For the WCDA, it allows 1) assimilating only the ocean observations into the ocean state; 2) assimilating only the atmosphere observations into the atmosphere state; 3) assimilating both types of observations into the corresponding component models. The results are evaluated by comparing the estimated ocean and atmosphere variables with the observational data.
How to cite: Tang, Q., Mu, L., Sidorenko, D., and Nerger, L.: Weakly and strongly coupled data assimilation with the coupled ocean-atmosphere model AWI-CM, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-5023, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-5023, 2020.