학술논문

Multi-species chemical data assimilation with the Danish Eulerian hemispheric model: system description and verification.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry. Sep2016, Vol. 73 Issue 3, p261-302. 42p.
Subject
*ATMOSPHERIC chemistry
*PHOTOCHEMISTRY
*TRACE gases
*KALMAN filtering
*TROPOSPHERIC chemistry
*MATHEMATICAL models
Language
ISSN
0167-7764
Abstract
Satellite retrievals of atmospheric composition provide a wealth of data on a global scale. These complement results from atmospheric chemistry-transport models (CTMs), and can be combined using data assimilation. We present two assimilation schemes coupled to the Danish Eulerian Hemispheric Model (DEHM), a three-dimensional, off-line CTM with full photochemistry: a variant on the ensemble Kalman filter and the three-dimensional variational scheme. The aim of this paper is to describe the two schemes and present an initial assessment of their impacts on model skill. Retrievals of multiple atmospheric trace gases are assimilated, namely: NO tropospheric column densities, CH total column densities, and partial column concentrations of O, CO and CH; these data are retrieved from four satellite sensors. Data for each species are assimilated independently of one another, and other species are only adjusted indirectly via the model's chemistry and dynamics. Assimilation results are compared with measurements from surface monitoring stations and other satellite retrievals, and preliminary validation results are presented.Reference simulations (without assimilation) grossly underestimate surface CO concentrations, and both assimilation schemes eliminate this large and systematic model bias. The assimilation improves the spatial correlation of modelled CO with surface observations, and improves the spatial correlation between forecasts and retrievals for CO, NO and O. Results for CH show a loss of skill due to a mismatch in model bias between two assimilated CH data-sets. Finally, we discuss differences in methodology and results between this paper and a recent study on multi-species chemical data assimilation. Joint optimisation of initial conditions and emission rates offers a promising direction for improving modelled boundary-layer concentrations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]