Publication | Open Access
Comparison of Wind Speed and Wave Height Trends from Twentieth-Century Models and Satellite Altimeters
85
Citations
57
References
2019
Year
Ocean DynamicsEngineeringAtmospheric SoundingOceanographyU 10Earth ScienceGeophysicsMarine MeteorologyAtmospheric ScienceMeteorological MeasurementOceanic SystemsGeodesyMeteorologySynthetic Aperture RadarGeographyOceanic ForcingWave Height TrendsSatellite AltimetersClimate DynamicsRadarClimatologyPhysical OceanographyUnreliable U 10Wind Speed
Abstract The trends in marine 10-m wind speed U 10 and significant wave height H s found in two century-long reanalyses are compared against a model-only integration. Reanalyses show spurious trends due to the assimilation of an increasing number of observations over time. The comparisons between model and reanalyses show that the areas where the discrepancies in U 10 and H s trends are greatest are also the areas where there is a marked increase in assimilated observations. Large differences in the yearly averages call into question the quality of the observations assimilated by the reanalyses, resulting in unreliable U 10 and H s trends before the 1950s. Four main regions of the world’s oceans are identified where the trends between model and reanalyses deviate strongly. These are the North Atlantic, the North Pacific, the Tasman Sea, and the western South Atlantic. The trends at +24-h lead time are markedly weaker and less correlated with the observation count. A 1985–2010 comparison with an extensive dataset of calibrated satellite altimeters shows contrasting results in H s trends but similar U 10 spatial trend distributions, with general agreement between model, reanalyses, and satellite altimeters on a broad increase in wind speed over the Southern Hemisphere.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1