the potential to estimate ocean thermal expansion by combining grace and satellite altimetry

16
Don P. Chambers Don P. Chambers Center for Space Research Center for Space Research The University of Texas at Austin The University of Texas at Austin Understanding Sea-Level Rise and Variability Understanding Sea-Level Rise and Variability 6-9 June, 2006 6-9 June, 2006 Paris, France Paris, France The Potential to Estimate The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry Altimetry

Upload: hang

Post on 21-Jan-2016

49 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry. Don P. Chambers Center for Space Research The University of Texas at Austin Understanding Sea-Level Rise and Variability 6-9 June, 2006 Paris, France. GOALS. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

Don P. ChambersDon P. ChambersCenter for Space ResearchCenter for Space Research

The University of Texas at AustinThe University of Texas at Austin

Understanding Sea-Level Rise and VariabilityUnderstanding Sea-Level Rise and Variability

6-9 June, 20066-9 June, 2006

Paris, FranceParis, France

The Potential to Estimate The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Ocean Thermal Expansion by

Combining GRACE and Satellite Combining GRACE and Satellite AltimetryAltimetry

Page 2: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

GOALSGOALS

• Computing mean ocean mass component of sea level from GRACE

• Potential for combining with altimetry to determine long-term trend in steric sea level

» Steric SL = Altimeter SL - GRACE SL

• Sources of uncertainty in rate estimate for GRACE

» Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) correction

» Degree 1 gravity coefficients (geocenter)

» Interannual variations in ocean mass and a short record

2

Page 3: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

Gravity Recovery & Climate Experiment Gravity Recovery & Climate Experiment (GRACE)(GRACE)

Science GoalsMeasure time variable gravity field to detect changes in the water storage and movement from reservoir to another (e.g., from ice sheets to ocean)

MissionJoint NASA/German mission implemented by NASA and DLR (Deutschen Zentrum für Luft-und Raumfahrt) under the NASA Earth System Science Pathfinder Program.Science data processing by University of Texas Center for Space Research (UTCSR) and GeoForschungsZentrum (GFZ)

OrbitLaunched: March 17, 2002Regular Science Data: August, 2002Original Lifetime: 5 yearsRecently NASA/DLR extended mission through 2009

3

Page 4: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

GRACE ErrorsGRACE Errors

long wavelength short

4

Page 5: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

•GRACE project produces a set of global gravity coefficients (Clm, Slm) every month

•Can convert these to a time-series of monthly average water level (sea level) over a basin by

ηba sin =QlΩba sinl,m

∑ W lmCΔClm +W lm

SΔSlm( )

Ql =aρE3ρW

2l +1( )1+ kl( )

Ocean kernel

•Ocean kernel designed to minimize error from GRACE noise AND aliasing of hydrology signals [Swenson and Wahr, JGR, 2002]

5

Page 6: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

• From CSR_RL01 GRACE coefficients

» Replacing C20 with values from SLR analysis and using seasonal model of C10, C11, and S11 terms (Chambers et al., GRL, 2004)

6

Page 7: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

Glacial Isostatic AdjustmentGlacial Isostatic Adjustment

• GRACE will measure:

» The long-term gravitational change due to glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA)

» Gravitational changes due to water mass transfer from melting of ice sheets

» Shorter period exchanges of water mass with continents

• Can we model GIA adequately over the ocean to remove this signal?

7

Page 8: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

GIA in GRACE ObservationGIA in GRACE Observation

• GRACE will observe a fall in SL related to GIA

• Part of drop in sea level measured by GRACE since 2002 is this GIA signal

• M. Tamisiea has calculated that the GIA signal in the GRACE observations ranges from -0.6 to -2 mm/year

8

Page 9: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

• Adding maximum GIA correction to GRACE changes interpretation of trend significantly

9

Page 10: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

Degree 1 Gravity VariationsDegree 1 Gravity Variations

• GRACE satellites orbit instantaneous mass center of Earth

• Degree 1 gravity coefficients are zero in a reference frame that is centered on the instantaneous mass center

• Terrestrial reference frame has a fixed center not at instantaneous mass center

• Water mass flux in a terrestrial reference frame will have variations in degree 1 terms

• To use GRACE to measure mass flux in an Earth-fixed frame, we have to model/measure these degree 1 variations

10

Page 11: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

• Previously demonstrated importance of modeling degree 1 variations for seasonal ocean mass studies [Chambers et al., GRL, 2004; Chambers, JGR, 2006].

• Seasonal models of degree 1 variations have some level of consistency

• Trends are completely unknown

GRACE w/o degree 1 coefficients GRACE w/ degree 1 coefficients

11

Page 12: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

• Convert simulated water level changes into gravity field coefficients (to degree/order 180)

• Compute ocean mass with and without degree 1 terms

• Result: trend is 0.1 mm/year lower if degree 1 not used.

Greenland: 22.0 cm/m2 water mass lost per year (0.75 mm SL)

Antarctica: 4.1 cm/m2 water mass lost per year (0.75 mm SL)

Oceans: 1.5 mm/year increase in SL

Land: No change

12

Page 13: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

• We have limited knowledge of interannual variations in ocean mass

• Some evidence of ± 4-5 mm variations at ENSO periods

With 1-year smoothing

13

Trend removed from Altimeter - TSL

Page 14: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

• Simulate interannual ocean mass by scaling SOI to estimate from J. Willis in 1997-1998

» 55 yr. trend set to zero

• Estimate 95% confidence interval based on standard deviation of trends over 3-15 yr intervals

14

Page 15: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

Rate Uncertainty for Ocean Mass from Rate Uncertainty for Ocean Mass from GRACE with 3-years of ObservationsGRACE with 3-years of Observations

15

Source Uncertainty (mm/year)

Formal 0.3

Knowledge of GIA correction 0.71

Knowledge of degree 1 rates 0.22

3-year period & ENSO-like variability 2.8

RSS (3-year rate)3 0.8

RSS (long-term)4 2.9

1 - from range of GIA corrections2 - doubled simulation estimate to be conservative; systematic!3 - without interannual uncertainty4 - all sources of trend uncertainty

Page 16: The Potential to Estimate Ocean Thermal Expansion by Combining GRACE and Satellite Altimetry

• Why the big difference between in situ TSL and space-based estimates?

» Unknown error in one or more of the systems?

» Changes in deep ocean heat storage not measured by Argo floats?

Yearly averages, maximum GIA correction added to GRACE

16