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Title: HYCOM GLBu0.08
Resolution: 1/12.5° (~0.08°)
Institution: Naval Research Laboratory
Date/Data Range: to
Experiment: 19.0
Configuration: blkdat.input_19.1
Computational Grid: Uniform 0.08° between 80.48°S – 80.48°N
Missing Data: Click here for a link to the days/hours missing in this reanalysis
Output Frequency: 3 hourly

System Description

The system is configured for the global ocean with HYCOM 2.2 as the dynamical model. Computations are carried out on the GLBb0.08 computational grid but here the output served on the uniform GLBu0.08 grid. There are 32 vertical layers (see blkdat.input). The bathymetry is derived from the 30-arc second GEBCO dataset. Surface forcing is from 1-hourly National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) Climate Forecast System Reanalysis (CFSR) with horizontal resolution of 0.3125° and includes wind stress, wind speed, heat flux (using bulk formula), and precipitation. The diurnal cycle is adequately resolved because of the temporal frequency of the input forcing. For additional details on the model configuration such as layer reference densities time steps, advection scheme, mixing etc. see blkdat.input. Except for the input forcing, the configuration of this Ocean Reanalysis is the same as the Global Ocean Forecast System 3.0, i.e. GLBa0.08-90.X and 91.X also served at hycom.org.

Note that the experiment number changes from 19.0 to 19.1 in August 1995 because the integration of the hindcast was moved from the Navy DoD Supercomputing Resource Center (DSRC) IBM Power 6 (DaVinci) to the IDataPlex (Kilrain) supercomputer. There were small changes to NCODA, but none that should have any significant impact on the model solution.

How It's Generated:

Topography

NAVOCEANO's netCDF Format

Data Assimilation

The system uses the Navy Coupled Ocean Data Assimilation (NCODA) system (Cummings, 2005, Cummings and Smedstad, 2013) for data assimilation. NCODA uses the model forecast as a first guess in a 3D variational scheme and assimilates available satellite altimeter observations (along track obtained via the Naval Oceanographic Office (NAVOCEANO) Altimeter Data Fusion Center) satellite and in-situ Sea Surface Temperature (SST) as well as available in-situ vertical temperature and salinity profiles from XBTs, Argo floats and moored buoys. MODAS synthetics are used for downward projection of surface information (Fox et al., 2002).

Operational Details

TBA

Detailed Information

Run Configuration (blkdat.input)
Contains model run configuration information such as time steps, advection scheme, mixing, vertical structure, etc.
Model Bathymetry (depth.[ab])
Files containing the model bathymetry.
Computational Grids (regional.grid.[ab])
Files containing the location of model grid point.

References

NRL Website
Contains snapshots, animations forecast verification statistics and model data comparisons.
(Cummings and Smedstad, 2013)
J. A. Cummings and O. M. Smedstad. 2013: Variational Data Assimilation for the Global Ocean. Data Assimilation for Atmospheric, Oceanic and Hydrologic Applications vol II, chapter 13, 303-343.
(Cummings, 2005)
Cummings, J.A., 2005: Operational multivariate ocean data assimilation. Quart. J. Royal Met. Soc., Part C, 131(613), 3583-3604.
(Fox et al., 2002)
Fox, D.N., W.J.Teague, C.N. Barron, M.R. Carnes, and C.M. Lee, 2002. The Modular Ocean Data Assimilation System (MODAS). J. Atmos. Ocean. Technol., 19, 240-252.