Abstract

Abstract. Since 19 October 2016, and in the framework of Copernicus Marine Environment Monitoring Service (CMEMS), Mercator Ocean has delivered real-time daily services (weekly analyses and daily 10-day forecasts) with a new global 1∕12∘ high-resolution (eddy-resolving) monitoring and forecasting system. The model component is the NEMO platform driven at the surface by the IFS ECMWF atmospheric analyses and forecasts. Observations are assimilated by means of a reduced-order Kalman filter with a three-dimensional multivariate modal decomposition of the background error. Along-track altimeter data, satellite sea surface temperature, sea ice concentration, and in situ temperature and salinity vertical profiles are jointly assimilated to estimate the initial conditions for numerical ocean forecasting. A 3D-VAR scheme provides a correction for the slowly evolving large-scale biases in temperature and salinity. This paper describes the recent updates applied to the system and discusses the importance of fine tuning an ocean monitoring and forecasting system. It details more particularly the impact of the initialization, the correction of precipitation, the assimilation of climatological temperature and salinity in the deep ocean, the construction of the background error covariance and the adaptive tuning of observation error on increasing the realism of the analysis and forecasts. The scientific assessment of the ocean estimations are illustrated with diagnostics over some particular years, assorted with time series over the time period 2007–2016. The overall impact of the integration of all updates on the product quality is also discussed, highlighting a gain in performance and reliability of the current global monitoring and forecasting system compared to its previous version.

Highlights

  • This paper describes the recent updates applied to the system and discusses the importance of fine tuning an ocean monitoring and forecasting system

  • Mercator Ocean monitoring and forecasting systems have been routinely operated in real time since early 2001

  • The system PSY4V3 was run over the October 2006– October 2016 period to catch up to real time, assimilating the “reprocessed” observations available at that time and the so-called “near-real-time” observations other

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Summary

Introduction

Mercator Ocean monitoring and forecasting systems have been routinely operated in real time since early 2001. SAM (SEEK) IAU 3D-VAR bias correction (1-month time window) MDT error adjusted Increase in Envisat altimeter error QC on T /S profiles New correlation radii Addition of a second QC on T /S vertical profiles Adaptive tuning of observation errors for SLA and SST New 3-D observation errors files for assimilation of in situ profiles Use of the SSH increment instead of the sum of barotropic and dynamic height increments Global mean increment of the total SSH is set to zero.

Physical model and latest updates
Data assimilation and latest updates
Additional quality controls on in situ observations
Quality control QC1
Quality control QC2
Impact of some sensitive updates
Initialization of oceanic simulation
Correction of precipitation
Construction of the background error covariance
Anomaly filtering
Choice of the simulation from which to calculate the anomalies
Adaptive tuning of observation errors
Scientific assessment
Assimilated SST
Comparison with a high-resolution SST external product
Temperature and salinity vertical profiles
Assimilated SLA
Comparison to tide gauge data
Assimilated sea ice concentration
Contingency table analysis
Currents
Findings
Summary and ways to improve the future system
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