Surface Pressure Tide Climatologies Deduced from a Quality-Controlled Network of Barometric Observations
Global "ground truth" knowledge of solar diurnal S sub(1) and semidiurnal S sub(2) surface pressure tides as furnished by barometric in situ observations represents a valuable standard for wide-ranging geophysical and meteorological applications. This study attempts to aid validations of t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Monthly weather review 2014-12, Vol.142 (12), p.4872-4889 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Global "ground truth" knowledge of solar diurnal S sub(1) and semidiurnal S sub(2) surface pressure tides as furnished by barometric in situ observations represents a valuable standard for wide-ranging geophysical and meteorological applications. This study attempts to aid validations of the air pressure tide signature in current climate or atmospheric analysis models by developing a new global assembly of nearly 6900 mean annual S sub(1) and S sub(2) estimates on the basis of station and marine barometric reports from the International Surface Pressure Databank, version 2 (ISPDv2), for a principal time span of 1990-2010. Previously published tidal compilations have been limited by inadequate spatial coverage or by internal inconsistencies and outliers from suspect tidal analyses; here, these problems are mostly overcome through 1) automated data filtering under ISPDv2's quality-control framework and 2) a meticulously conducted visual inspection of station harmonic decompositions. The quality of the resulting compilation is sufficient to support global interpolation onto a reasonably fine mesh of 1 degree horizontal spacing. A multiquadric interpolation algorithm, with parameters fine-tuned by frequency and for land or ocean regions, is employed. Global charts of the gridded surface pressure climatologies are presented, and these are mapped to a wavenumber versus latitude spectrum for comparison with long-term means of S sub(1) and S sub(2) from four present-day atmospheric analysis systems. This cross verification, shown to be feasible even for the minor stationary modes of the tides, reveals a small but probably significant overestimation of up to 18% for peak semidiurnal amplitudes as predicted by global analysis models. |
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ISSN: | 0027-0644 1520-0493 |
DOI: | 10.1175/MWR-D-14-00217.1 |