Improving the joint estimation of CO2 and surface carbon fluxes using a constrained ensemble Kalman filter in COLA (v1.0)
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Published:2022-07-19
Issue:14
Volume:15
Page:5511-5528
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Liu ZhiqiangORCID, Zeng NingORCID, Liu Yun, Kalnay EugeniaORCID, Asrar Ghassem, Wu Bo, Cai Qixiang, Liu Di, Han PengfeiORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Atmospheric inversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) measurements to
better understand carbon sources and sinks has made great progress over the
last 2 decades. However, most of the studies, including a four-dimensional
variational ensemble Kalman filter and Bayesian synthesis approaches,
directly obtain only fluxes, while CO2 concentration is derived with
the forward model as part of a post-analysis. Kang et al. (2012) used the local ensemble transform Kalman filter (LETKF), which updates the CO2, surface carbon flux (SCF), and meteorology fields simultaneously. Following this track, a system with a short assimilation window and a long observation window was developed (Liu et al., 2019). However, this data assimilation system faces the challenge of maintaining carbon mass conservation. To overcome this shortcoming, here we apply a constrained ensemble Kalman filter (CEnKF) approach to ensure the conservation of global CO2 mass. After a standard LETKF procedure, an additional assimilation is used to adjust CO2 at each model grid point and to ensure the consistency between the analysis and the first guess of the global CO2 mass. Compared to an observing system simulation experiment without mass conservation, the CEnKF significantly reduces the annual global SCF bias from ∼ 0.2 to less than 0.06 Gt and slightly improves the seasonal and annual performance over tropical and southern extratropical regions. We show that this system can accurately track the spatial distribution of annual mean SCF. And the system reduces the seasonal flux root mean square error from a priori to analysis by 48 %–90 %, depending on the continental region. Moreover, the 2015–2016 El Niño impact is well captured with anomalies mainly in the tropics.
Funder
Dream Project of Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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