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Surface fluxes and Ocean state estimates in the eastern | 
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Subtropical North Atlantic. | 
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 | 
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Olwijn Leeuwenburgh, Patrick Heimbach and Detlef Stammer | 
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 | 
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A coarse resolution regional ocean model of the eastern | 
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subtropical North Atlantic is used in a 5-year run to   | 
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investigate the effects of two different surface forcing | 
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formulations and of several strategies to minimize a cost | 
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function in the context of ocean state estimation.  | 
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The model is a 2 degree resolution application of the | 
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MITgcm which is forced at the open boundaries by | 
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temperature, salinity and current velocities obtained | 
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from a global implementation of the same OGCM. The assimilated | 
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data consist of T/P and ERS altimetry, a mean sea surface | 
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estimate, and Reynolds SST, and the results are compared  | 
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with independent buoy data obtained from the Subduction   | 
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Experiment.  Different strategies to bring the model | 
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into consistency with ocean observations are being discussed. | 
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All of them use the models adjoint to adjust control variables, | 
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such as the initial state, lateral boundary conditions  and surface | 
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forcing.  Control terms include either the surface fluxes of momentum, | 
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net heat and freshwater fluxes, or the atmospheric state as control | 
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variables. Early results indicate that there are distinct differences | 
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in magnitude and behavior of the cost function depending on | 
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the type of forcing and the manner in which control | 
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variables are included and adjusted. While a bulk-formulae | 
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type forcing leads to better initial agreement between | 
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model and data, the optimization is more effective (faster | 
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decay) with the traditional type of flux forcing. | 
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