Abstract

Abstract. In this work a simplified observing system simulation experiment (OSSE) approach is used to investigate which Argo design sampling in the Mediterranean Sea would be necessary to properly capture the mesoscale dynamics in this basin. The monitoring of the mesoscale features is not an initial objective of the Argo network. However, it is an interesting question from the perspective of future network extensions in order to improve the ocean state estimates. The true field used to conduct the OSSEs is provided by a specific altimetry-gridded merged product for the Mediterranean Sea. Synthetic observations were obtained by sub-sampling this Nature Run according to different configurations of the ARGO network. The observation errors required to perform the OSSEs were obtained through the comparison of sea level anomalies (SLAs) from altimetry and dynamic height anomalies (DHAs) computed from the real in situ Argo network. This analysis also contributes to validate satellite SLAs with an increased confidence. The simulation experiments show that a configuration similar to the current Argo array in the Mediterranean (with a spatial resolution of 2° × 2°) is only able to recover the large-scale signals of the basin. Increasing the spatial resolution to nearly 75 km × 75 km, allows the capture of most of the mesoscale signal in the basin and to retrieve the SLA field with a RMSE of 3 cm for spatial scales larger than 150 km, similar to those presently captured by the altimetry. This would represent a theoretical reduction of 40 % of the actual RMSE. Such a high-resolution Argo array composed of around 450 floats, cycling every 10 days, is expected to increase the actual network cost by approximately a factor of 6.

Highlights

  • The Mediterranean Sea is a semi-enclosed basin connected with the Atlantic Ocean through the Strait of Gibraltar

  • We have investigated which configuration in terms of the spatial sampling of the Argo array in the Mediterranean would be necessary to recover the mesoscale dynamics in the basin as seen by altimetry

  • The observation errors required to perform the observing system simulation experiment (OSSE) were obtained through the comparison of sea level anomalies (SLAs) from altimetry and dynamic height anomalies (DHAs) computed from the real in situ Argo network

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Summary

Introduction

The Mediterranean Sea is a semi-enclosed basin connected with the Atlantic Ocean through the Strait of Gibraltar. The internal Rossby radius of deformation in the basin is O (10–15 km), which is four times smaller than typical values for much of the world ocean according to Robinson et al (2001) This fact highlights that in the Mediterranean Sea the spatial resolution of the Lagrangian profiling floats of the Argo programme, which consists of a global network of more than 3000 operating floats (Roemmich and the Argo Steering Team, 2009; Riser et al, 2016) drifting with less than 3◦ mean spacing, should be reduced four times compared to the open ocean

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