Pressure Sensor Drifts in Argo and Their Impacts

被引:36
作者
Barker, Paul M. [1 ]
Dunn, Jeff R. [2 ]
Domingues, Catia M. [3 ]
Wijffels, Susan E. [2 ]
机构
[1] Antarctic Climate & Ecosyst Cooperat Res Ctr, Hobart, Tas, Australia
[2] Ctr Australian Weather & Climate Res, Hobart, Tas, Australia
[3] Ctr Australian Weather & Climate Res, Aspendale, Vic, Australia
关键词
OCEAN; REEVALUATION; PROGRAM;
D O I
10.1175/2011JTECHO831.1
中图分类号
P75 [海洋工程];
学科分类号
0814 ; 081505 ; 0824 ; 082401 ;
摘要
In recent years, autonomous profiling floats have become the prime component of the in situ ocean observing system through the implementation of the Argo program. These data are now the dominant input to estimates of the evolution of the global ocean heat content and associated thermosteric sea level rise. The Autonomous Profiling Explorer (APEX) is the dominant type of Argo float (similar to 62%), and a large portion of these floats report pressure measurements that are uncorrected for sensor drift, the size and source of which are described herein. The remaining Argo float types are designed to automatically self-correct for any pressure drift. Only about 57% of the APEX float profiles (or similar to 38% Argo profiles) can be corrected, but this typically has not been done by the data centers that distribute the data (as of January 2009). A pressure correction method for APEX floats is described and applied to the Argo dataset. A comparison between estimates using the corrected Argo dataset and the publically available uncorrected dataset (as of January 2009) reveals that the pressure corrections remove significant regional errors from ocean temperature, salinity, and thermosteric sea level fields. In the global mean, 43% of uncorrectable APEX float profiles (or similar to 28% Argo profiles) appear to largely offset the effect of the correctable APEX float profiles with positive pressure drifts. While about half of the uncorrectable APEX profiles can, in principle, be recovered in the near future (after inclusion of technical information that allows for corrections), the other half have negative pressure drifts truncated to zero (resulting from firmware limitations), which do not allow for corrections. Therefore, any Argo pressure profile that cannot be corrected for biases should be excluded from global change research. This study underscores the ongoing need for careful analyses to detect and remove subtle but systematic errors in ocean observations.
引用
收藏
页码:1036 / 1049
页数:14
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