Turbulent viscosity optimized by data assimilation

  • Leredde Y
  • Devenon J
  • Dekeyser I
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Abstract

As an alternative approach to classical turbulence modelling using a ®rst or second order closure, the data assimilation method of optimal control is applied to estimate a time and space-dependent turbulent viscosity in a three-dimensional oceanic circulation model. The optimal control method, described for a 3-D primitive equation model, involves the minimization of a cost function that quanti®es the discrepancies between the simulations and the observations. An iterative algorithm is obtained via the adjoint model resolution. In a first experiment, a K+L model is used to simulate the one-dimensional development of inertial oscillations resulting from a wind stress at the sea surface and with the presence of a halocline. These results are used as synthetic observations to be assimilated. The turbulent viscosity is then recovered without the K+L closure, even with sparse and noisy observations. The problems of controllability and of the dimensions of the control are then discussed. A second experiment consists of a two-dimensional schematic simulation. A 2-D turbulent viscosity field is estimated from data on the initial and final states of a coastal upwelling event.

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Leredde, Y., Devenon, J.-L., & Dekeyser, I. (1999). Turbulent viscosity optimized by data assimilation. Annales Geophysicae, 17(11), 1463. https://doi.org/10.1007/s005850050871

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