Improving a joint inversion of GRACE, GPS and modelled ocean bottom pressure by using in-situ data.


Contact
Madlen.Gebler [ at ] awi.de

Abstract

To investigate the changes in ocean bottom pressure (OBP) and ocean mass Rietbroek et al. (2009) performed a joint least square inversion of weekly GRACE solutions, patterns of large-scale deformation measured by a network of GPS stations and modelled OBP from the Finite Element Sea ice Ocean Model (FESOM). The correlation of this inversion with in-situ OBP ranges between 0.7 and 0.8 in some regions but for example in the tropical Atlantic the correlation is below 0.4. To improve the agreement of the inversion with in-situ data, a part of the in-situ data is included directly into the inversion. The in-situ OBP data was taken from the global OBP data base of Macrander et al. (2010) and averaged to weekly means. Depending on the weight put on the in-situ data, the correlation and regression increases significantly to a value larger than 0.9. The variance of the system is locally reduced by almost 50% at the locations included into the inversion while the difference of the global ocean mean is on average below 10%. Furthermore the global ocean mean is used to compute a bias term for correcting the global ocean mean obtained by the FESOM model.



Item Type
Conference (Poster)
Authors
Divisions
Programs
Publication Status
Published
Event Details
EGU, 22 Apr 2012 - 27 Apr 2012, Wien, Austria.
Eprint ID
30422
Cite as
Gebler, M. , Rietbroek, R. , Schröter, J. and Wolff, J. O. (2012): Improving a joint inversion of GRACE, GPS and modelled ocean bottom pressure by using in-situ data. , EGU, Wien, Austria, 22 April 2012 - 27 April 2012 .


Download
[thumbnail of Poster_landscapeEGU12.pdf]
Preview
PDF
Poster_landscapeEGU12.pdf

Download (588kB) | Preview
Cite this document as:

Share

Research Platforms
N/A

Campaigns
N/A


Actions
Edit Item Edit Item