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contributor authorDe Lannoy, Gabriëlle J. M.
contributor authorReichle, Rolf H.
contributor authorHouser, Paul R.
contributor authorArsenault, Kristi R.
contributor authorVerhoest, Niko E. C.
contributor authorPauwels, Valentijn R. N.
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:30:24Z
date available2017-06-09T16:30:24Z
date copyright2010/04/01
date issued2009
identifier issn1525-755X
identifier otherams-69088.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4210718
description abstractFour methods based on the ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) are tested to assimilate coarse-scale (25 km) snow water equivalent (SWE) observations (typical of passive microwave satellite retrievals) into finescale (1 km) land model simulations. Synthetic coarse-scale observations are assimilated directly using an observation operator for mapping between the coarse and fine scales or, alternatively, after disaggregation (regridding) to the finescale model resolution prior to data assimilation. In either case, observations are assimilated either simultaneously or independently for each location. Results indicate that assimilating disaggregated finescale observations independently (method 1D-F1) is less efficient than assimilating a collection of neighboring disaggregated observations (method 3D-Fm). Direct assimilation of coarse-scale observations is superior to a priori disaggregation. Independent assimilation of individual coarse-scale observations (method 3D-C1) can bring the overall mean analyzed field close to the truth, but does not necessarily improve estimates of the finescale structure. There is a clear benefit to simultaneously assimilating multiple coarse-scale observations (method 3D-Cm) even as the entire domain is observed, indicating that underlying spatial error correlations can be exploited to improve SWE estimates. Method 3D-Cm avoids artificial transitions at the coarse observation pixel boundaries and can reduce the RMSE by 60% when compared to the open loop in this study.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleSatellite-Scale Snow Water Equivalent Assimilation into a High-Resolution Land Surface Model
typeJournal Paper
journal volume11
journal issue2
journal titleJournal of Hydrometeorology
identifier doi10.1175/2009JHM1192.1
journal fristpage352
journal lastpage369
treeJournal of Hydrometeorology:;2009:;Volume( 011 ):;issue: 002
contenttypeFulltext


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