Development of the glider system In-Situ Observations MERSEA 3rd annual meeting London, 06.03.2006 IFM-GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany IMEDEA, Esporles, Spain IFREMER,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CMCC – Centro euro-Mediterraneo per i Cambiamenti Climatici Italian Ministry for the Environment, Land and Sea The ADRICOSM-STAR Project: ADRICOSM INTEGRATED.
Advertisements

Basics of numerical oceanic and coupled modelling Antonio Navarra Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia Italy Simon Mason Scripps Institution.
Regional and Coastal Circulation Modeling: California Current System Art Miller Scripps Institution of Oceanography ECOFOR Workshop Friday Harbor, WA September.
ECOOP Meeting March 14-21, 2005 ECOOP WP7 Pierre-Yves LE TRAON Better use of remote sensing and in-situ observing systems for coastal/regional seas Objective.
WP4 Task T4.2 WP4-T4.2 : Establishment of validation criteria of multidisciplinary information products
The Adaptive Sampling and Prediction (ASAP) Program A Multi-University Research Initiative (MURI) Learn how to deploy, direct, and utilize autonomous vehicles.
Bio-optical Gliders and Profiling floats in the Mediterranean ARGO SCIENCE WORKSHOP – MARCH 13 – 18, 2006 Fabrizio D’Ortenzio 1, Katarzyna Niewiadomska.
OCEN 201 Introduction to Ocean & Coastal Engineering Instruments & Measurements Jun Zhang
Designing a Glider Network to Monitor Rapid Climate Change: Evaluation of Thermal Glider Flight Characteristics Background Conclusions Acknowledgements.
Darcy Glenn 1, Holly Ibanez 2, Amelia Snow 3, Oscar Schofield 3 1 University of Vermont 2 Florida Institute of Technology 3 Rutgers University Designing.
Spray Activities for ASAP Scripps Institution of Oceanography Russ Davis Jeff Sherman Jim Dufour Brent Jones 1. Array design and glider routing 2. Field.
Mixing & Turbulence Mixing leads to a homogenization of water mass properties Mixing occurs on all scales in ocean molecular scales (10’s of mm) basin.
A Forecasting system for the Southern California Current Emanuele Di Lorenzo Arthur Miller Bruce Cornuelle Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD.
Mixing & Turbulence Mixing leads to a homogenization of water mass properties Mixing occurs on all scales in ocean –molecular scales (10’s of  m) –basin.
Define Current decreases exponentially with depth. At the same time, its direction changes clockwise with depth (The Ekman spiral). we have,. and At the.
Australian National Facility for Ocean Gliders
Spray Gliders Seaglider Slocum.
NRT data stream from the gliders Slocum and Spray to Coriolis EGO meeting Paris 2-3/10/06.
JERICO KICK OFF MEETINGPARIS – Maison de la recherche - 24 & 25 May 2011 WP9: New Methods to Assess the Impact of Coastal Observing Systems Presented by.
Utilizing Remote Sensing, AUV’s and Acoustic Biotelemetry to Create Dynamic Single Species Distribution Models the Mid-Atlantic Matthew Breece, Matt Oliver,
Institut Mediterrani d’Estudis Avançats Esporles · Mallorca · SPAIN A study of potential effects of climatic change on the ecosystems of the Mediterranean.
UNDERWATER GLIDERS.
Define Current decreases exponentially with depth and. At the same time, its direction changes clockwise with depth (The Ekman spiral). we have,. and At.
MERSEA Integrated System Exeter Nov 2005 IGST (F. Blanc) Brief Overview of Mersea
Time variability of the ocean circulation around New Caledonia from altimetry, gliders and other in situ observations Frédéric MARIN 1, Jean-Luc FUDA 2,
Mode (Eighteen Degree) Water V.Y. Chow EPS Dec 2005.
The role of gliders in sustained observations of the ocean Deliverable 4.1 or WP 4.
Zenghong Liu & Jianping Xu State Key Lab of Satellite Ocean Environment Dynamics The Second Institute of Oceanography, SOA GOVST-V , Beijing.
Marine Core Service MY OCEAN Potential contribution of Observatories to GMES Marine Core Service, MyOcean Fabrice HERNANDEZ IRD/Mercator Ocean, France.
SCCOOS Goals and Efforts Within COCMP, SCCOOS aims to develop products and procedures—based on observational data—that effectively evaluate and improve.
Marine Instrumentation Class
TOPAZ operations, products, ongoing developments Laurent Bertino, Knut Arild Lisæter, Goran Zangana, NERSC OPNet meeting, Geilo, 6 th Nov
EGO – COST - Groom-gliders Kiel meeting Kiel, June 2014 Data-management activity n Within Groom and with COST support, the glider data- management group.
The Rutgers IMCS Ocean Modeling Group Established in 1990, the Ocean Modeling Group at Rutgers has as one of it foremost goals the development and interdisciplinary.
IICWG 5 th Science Workshop, April Sea ice modelling and data assimilation in the TOPAZ system Knut A. Lisæter and Laurent Bertino.
TOPAZ the Arctic TEP and the Arctic GOOS L. Bertino, G. Evensen, K.A. Lisæter, I. Keghouche Arctic GOOS opening, Bergen, 12 th Sept
Developments within FOAM Adrian Hines, Dave Storkey, Rosa Barciela, John Stark, Matt Martin IGST, 16 Nov 2005.
The Mediterranen Forecasting System: 10 years of developments (and the next ten) N.Pinardi INGV, Bologna, Italy.
Review of NOAA Intensity Forecasting Experiment (IFEX) 2008 Accomplishments and Plans for 2009 Eric Uhlhorn, Frank Marks, John Gamache, Sim Aberson, Jason.
1) What is the variability in eddy currents and the resulting impact on global climate and weather? Resolving meso-scale and sub- meso-scale ocean dynamics.
1) University of Washington, 2) Faroese Fisheries Laboratory
Silver Spring HRMM Workshop April Global Ocean Surface Underway Data project (GOSUD) Theirry Carval – Coriolis Ifremer Bob Keely – MEDS Thierry.
Typical Distributions of Water Characteristics in the Oceans.
New Technology for basin wide monitoring: GLIDERS Institut für Meereskunde (University of Kiel, Germany) Pierre Testor & Uwe Send (WP5 leader) MFSTEP Partner.
GODAE IGST X Exeter, Nov Mercator Status 1. The system 2. Some users 3. The consortium 4. Mersea & plans
ISAC Contribution to Ocean Color activity Mediterranean high resolution surface chlorophyll mapping Use available bio-optical data sets to estimate the.
Evaluation of two global HYCOM 1/12º hindcasts in the Mediterranean Sea Cedric Sommen 1, Alexandra Bozec 2, Eric P. Chassignet 2 Experiments Transport.
Cal/Val for physics MED-MFC internal meeting CMCC-INGV-SOCIB Lecce E. Clementi, INGV.
NUMERICAL STUDY OF THE MEDITERRANEAN OUTFLOW WITH A SIMPLIFIED TOPOGRAPHY Sergio Ramírez-Garrido, Jordi Solé, Antonio García-Olivares, Josep L. Pelegrí.
Mediterranean- Gaps and Needs Nadia Pinardi University of Bologna Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia Italy.
Application of HYCOM in Eddy- Resolving Global Ocean Prediction Community Effort: Community Effort: NRL, Florida State, U. of Miami, GISS, NOAA/NCEP, NOAA/AOML,
The Mediterranean Forecasting INGV-Bologna.
UNDERSTANDING OCEAN SALINITY
SPURS Synthesis Research Objectives: Budget calculations Resolve important terms of the freshwater and heat budgets of the upper 1000 m on temporal scales.
HYCOM data assimilation Short term: ▪ Improve current OI based technique Assimilate satellite data (tracks) directly Improve vertical projection technique.
HYCOM and GODAE in Relation to Navy Ocean Prediction An Overview Presented by Harley Hurlburt Naval Research Laboratory Stennis Space Center, MS
1 Modeling and Forecasting for SCCOOS (Southern California Coastal Ocean Observing System) Yi Chao 1, 2 & Jim McWilliams 2 1 Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
I. Objectives and Methodology DETERMINATION OF CIRCULATION IN NORTH ATLANTIC BY INVERSION OF ARGO FLOAT DATA Carole GRIT, Herlé Mercier The methodology.
RTOFS Monitoring and Evaluation Metrics Avichal Mehra MMAB/EMC/NCEP/NWS.
Validating SMAP SSS with in situ measurements
Bruce Cornuelle, Josh Willis, Dean Roemmich
Multi-year Trends and Event Response
Operational Oceanography Science and Services for Europe and Mediterranean Srdjan Dobricic, CMCC, Bologna, Italy on behalf of National Group of Operational.
Google Earth: Satellite & Glider Data
Flight Across the Atlantic
OC3570 Cruise Project Presentation: Slocum Glider Study
Assessment of the Surface Mixed Layer Using Glider and Buoy Data
UNDERWATER GLIDERS.
MARACOOS Ocean Gliders: Mapping the Mid Atlantic Cold Pool
autonomous underwater profiling glider
Presentation transcript:

Development of the glider system In-Situ Observations MERSEA 3rd annual meeting London, IFM-GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany IMEDEA, Esporles, Spain IFREMER, LPO, Coriolis, CERSAT, Brest, France, LOCEAN, Paris, France, MERCATOR, Toulouse, France SIO, LaJolla, CA, USA

1)Gliders are driven by positive and negative buoyancy created by a change in volume. No propeller is required. 2)Wings convert vertical velocity into forward velocity. 3)Glide downward when denser than surrounding water and upward when buoyant, in a sawtooth pattern. Spray Scripps Institution of Oceanography Seaglider APL-University of Washington Slocum Webb Research Corp. Autonomous Underwater Gliding Vehicle (AUGVs): GLIDERS change of buoyancy and control of internal mass distribution forward movements induced vertical velocity, and control of roll and pitch

Coriolis Data Center IFREMER Brest, France Numerical Models Mercator, MFS,... Ground Station IFM-GEOMAR Kiel, Germany U ~ cm/s W ~ 10-20cm/s Autonomous Underwater Gliding Vehicle (AUGVs): GLIDERS 1k m ~2-5 km between surfacings

North Atlantic Ocean Mediterranean Sea Development of the glider system:  Collection of Physical and Biogeochemical Data during the TOP phase  Data Flow and Quality Control  Data Assimilation  Next operations Spray glider Scripps Institution of Oceanography Slocum glider Webb Research Corporation MERSEA gliders WP3.5: assessment of available long-range glider technologies which meet MERSEA requirements

Mediterranean Sea Operations with 2 Slocums 1) Development of user-fitted lithium batteries for better endurance (x3) Tests during a “virtual mooring“ mission. ~120 profiles (0-1000m, end of Sept. 2005) 2) Trials in coastal environment (0-200m) Poster WP3.5 Virtual mooring off Mallorca To be continued... Potential temperature

North Atlantic Ocean – TOP phase Glider survey around PAP (MERSEA multidisciplinary mooring) Press releases for MERSEA Ouest-FranceTelegramme Proven ~3-months endurance (> 2300 km horiz.) Carried out ~450 dives to 1000m measurements of - Salinity, - Temperature, - Fluorescence (Chl), - Currents averaged over m (green arrows). Preparation at Ifremer (Brest) Deployment from the Argonaute (SHOM) on the still active! +

All profiles in grey. Last profiles in color. [n=last profile] North Atlantic Ocean 5 Dec now ~450 profiles to 1000m [5 profiles/day] Vertical res. ~ 3 m Horiz res. ~ 3-5 km n, n-1, n-2, n-3, n-4, n-5, n-6 Salinity Pot. temperatureChlPot. Density

North Atlantic Ocean Large scale: water mass characteristics and distribution, mixed layer evolution Mesoscale (~50 km): fronts, eddies Small scale (~3-5km): oscillations, filaments – “subgrid phenomena“ Physical constraints on numerical models Potential temperature along the glider trajectory ~ 2300 km - 3 months Mixed layer depth

North Atlantic Ocean Large scale: water mass characteristics and distribution, mixed layer evolution Mesoscale (~50 km): fronts, eddies Small scale (~3-5km): oscillations, filaments – “subgrid phenomena“ Physical constraints on numerical models + PAP 80 km Potential temperature along the glider trajectory U ~ 30cm/s

North Atlantic Ocean Large scale: water mass characteristics and distribution, mixed layer evolution Mesoscale (~50 km): fronts, eddies Small scale (~3-5km): oscillations, filaments – “subgrid phenomena“ Physical constraints on numerical models + Potential temperature along the glider trajectory PAP

North Atlantic Ocean Large scale: water mass characteristics and distribution, mixed layer evolution Mesoscale (~50 km): fronts, eddies Small scale (~3-5km): oscillations, filaments – “subgrid phenomena“ Physical constraints on numerical models Salinity along the glider trajectory

Large scale: biological acitivity (mainly mixed layer), vertical distribution/integral Mesoscale (~50 km): local modulations Small scale (~3-5km): diurnal cycle, filaments North Atlantic Ocean Fluorescence (Chl) along the glider trajectory Vertical integral = bio-activity in the mixed layer validation elements for coupled physical-biogeochemical models

Glider Control from Land Monitoring the health of the glider (Voltage, pump time, waypoints, comms...) Remote steering with information from: 1) model analyses/forecasts 2) satellite imagery “Glider Routing“ in development: use of a glider simulator in NRT to forecast glider trajectories > MERCATOR - SSH AVHRR - SST

Coriolis ftp server Data Access Mersea In-Situ Portal data visualization Coriolis data selection website data visualization and download

Quality Control and Metadata QC procedures at Coriolis like for profiling floats. Profiles are considered as vertical. - T and S outsiders based on historical data - Density inversions are rejected + visual inspection Metadata: Vehicle name, project, PI Waypoint (heading) Angle of ascent/descent Target depth Climb depth Target altitude Time between surfacing Current correction Dive #260 – “dirt“ in the conductivity cell

Assimilation of glider data Temperature differences between MERCATOR North Atlantic 1/15° and the in-situ observations Before data assimilation After data assimilation glider The model trajectory is modified by the data assimilation process, to better fit the observations. development required to better assimilate in-situ data at the moment: correlation criteria for profiling floats 1 profile per 1°x1° per week >> in progress

Achievements and Plans Demonstrated 1) Steering possibility 2) Long endurance 3) Near real time physical and biogeochemical data 4) High density and resolution of the measurements 5) Continuous measurements 6) Impact on operational numerical products Next operations - Deployments in the Western Mediterranean end of March - Deployments in the North Atlantic 1) Maintain surveys around PAP recovery/redeployment 2) Similar survey around CIS June-Sept 2006