Estimating open-ocean boundary conditions : sensitivity studies
Estimating open-ocean boundary conditions : sensitivity studies
Date
1995-08
Authors
Gunson, James R.
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Date Created
Location
39°N, 55°W
DOI
10.1575/1912/5627
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Keywords
Fluid dynamics
Ocean waves
Ocean waves
Abstract
The problem of estimating boundary and initial conditions for a regional open-ocean
model is addressed here. With the objective of mimicking the SYNOP experiment
in the Gulf Stream system, a meandering jet is modeled by the fully nonlinear
barotropic vorticity equation. Simulated observations of current velocity are taken
using current meters and acoustic tomography. Twin experiments are performed in
which the adjoint method is used to reconstruct the flow field. The estimated flow is
forced to resemble the true flow by minimizing a cost function with respect to some
control variables. At the minimum, the error covariance matrix of the estimated
control variables can be evaluated from the inverse Hessian of the cost function.
The first major scientific objective of this work is the estimation of initial
and boundary conditions for the model from sparse interior data. First the vorticity
initial conditions are used as control variables and the boundary conditions are kept
fixed. The jet-like flow is found to induce strong dependence of the model/data
misfit upon the specified boundary conditions. Successively, the boundary values of
streamfunction and vorticity are included among the control variables and estimated
together with the initial conditions. Experiments are performed with various choices
of scaling and first guess for the control variables, and various observational strategies.
The first major new result obtained is the successful estimation of the complete
set of initial and boundary conditions, necessary to integrate the vorticity equation
forward in time. From a time-invariant first guess for the boundary conditions, the
assimilation is able to create temporal variations at the boundaries that make the
interior flow match well the velocity observations, even when noise is added. It is
found that information from the observations is communicated to the boundaries
by advection of vorticity and by the instantaneous domain-wide connections in the
streamfunction field due to the elliptic character of the Poisson equation.
The second major scientific objective is the estimation of error covariances in
the presence of strongly nonlinear dynamics. The evaluation of the full error covariance
matrix for the estimated control variables from the inverse Hessian matrix is
investigated along with its dependence upon the degree of nonlinearity in the dynam1cs. Further major new results here obtained are the availability of off-diagonal
covariances, the successful calculation of error covariances for all boundary and initial
conditions, and the estimation of errors for the interior fields of streamfunction
and vorticity. The role of the Hessian matrix is assessed in gauging the sensitivity
of the estimated boundary and initial conditions to the data. Also, the importance
is stressed of retaining off-diagonal structure of the Hessian to obtain more accurate
error estimates.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution August 1995
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Citation
Gunson, J. R. (1995). Estimating open-ocean boundary conditions : sensitivity studies [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/5627