TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of Ocean Model Horizontal Resolution on the Representation of Global Annual-To-Multidecadal Coastal Sea Level Variability
AU - Little, Christopher M.
AU - Yeager, Stephen G.
AU - Ponte, Rui M.
AU - Chang, Ping
AU - Kim, Who M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Emerging high-resolution global ocean climate models are expected to improve both hindcasts and forecasts of coastal sea level variability by better resolving ocean turbulence and other small-scale phenomena. To examine this hypothesis, we compare annual to multidecadal coastal sea level variability over the 1993–2018 period, as observed by tide gauges and as simulated by two identically forced ocean models, at (Formula presented.) (LR) and (Formula presented.) (HR) horizontal resolution. Differences between HR and LR, and misfits with tide gauges, are spatially coherent at regional alongcoast scales. Resolution-related improvements are largest in, and near, marginal seas. Near attached western boundary currents, sea level variance is several times greater in HR than LR, but correlations with observations may be reduced, due to intrinsic ocean variability. Globally, in HR simulations, intrinsic variability comprises from zero to over 80% of coastal sea level variance. Outside of eddy-rich regions, simulated coastal sea level variability is generally damped relative to observations. We hypothesize that weak coastal variability is related to large-scale, remotely forced, variability; in both HR and LR, tropical sea level variance is underestimated by (Formula presented.) 50% relative to satellite altimetric observations. Similar coastal dynamical regimes (e.g., attached western boundary currents) exhibit a consistent sensitivity to horizontal resolution, suggesting that these findings are generalizable to regions with limited coastal observations.
AB - Emerging high-resolution global ocean climate models are expected to improve both hindcasts and forecasts of coastal sea level variability by better resolving ocean turbulence and other small-scale phenomena. To examine this hypothesis, we compare annual to multidecadal coastal sea level variability over the 1993–2018 period, as observed by tide gauges and as simulated by two identically forced ocean models, at (Formula presented.) (LR) and (Formula presented.) (HR) horizontal resolution. Differences between HR and LR, and misfits with tide gauges, are spatially coherent at regional alongcoast scales. Resolution-related improvements are largest in, and near, marginal seas. Near attached western boundary currents, sea level variance is several times greater in HR than LR, but correlations with observations may be reduced, due to intrinsic ocean variability. Globally, in HR simulations, intrinsic variability comprises from zero to over 80% of coastal sea level variance. Outside of eddy-rich regions, simulated coastal sea level variability is generally damped relative to observations. We hypothesize that weak coastal variability is related to large-scale, remotely forced, variability; in both HR and LR, tropical sea level variance is underestimated by (Formula presented.) 50% relative to satellite altimetric observations. Similar coastal dynamical regimes (e.g., attached western boundary currents) exhibit a consistent sensitivity to horizontal resolution, suggesting that these findings are generalizable to regions with limited coastal observations.
KW - OMIP
KW - coastal
KW - high resolution
KW - intrinsic variability
KW - sea level
KW - tide gauge
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85212820898
U2 - 10.1029/2024JC021679
DO - 10.1029/2024JC021679
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212820898
SN - 2169-9275
VL - 129
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
IS - 12
M1 - e2024JC021679
ER -