Estimating the Circulation & Climate of the Ocean
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NEWS

Febrauray 2010: ECCO-GODAE to be featured at AGU Ocean Science 2010 Town Hall Meeting

The National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP) will hold a Town Hall meeting during OS 2010, entitled: Ocean Partnerships: Collaborative Oceanographic Research for the Future. One of the projects featured will be ECCO-GODAE. The meeting takes place on Tuesday, February 23r d, from 11:45 to 12:45 in room D139.

August 2009: Editors' Highlight in GRL

Work by R.M. Ponte and K.J. Quinn on Bottom pressure changes around Antarctica and wind-driven meridional flows was picked as Editors' Highight in the Geophysical Research Letters' recent volume 36..

June 2009: A new ECCO-GODAE solution

The MIT/AER ECCO-GODAE project issued a new solution of its recent version 3 system. The new solution uses atmospheric state fields as control variables in conjunction with an adjoint of the Large and Yeager surface boundary layer scheme, as well as a dynamic/thermodynamical sea-ice model. The solution has been update through the end of 2007 (calculations through end of 2008 are under way). The new solution is available via ECCO's LAS server at MIT.

Dec 2008: ECCO session at AGU Fall Meeting 2008

AGU's Fall Meeting 2008 will feature an ECCO session, identified as OS04: CLIVAR/GODAE: The ECCO State Estimates. This session will provide an opportunity for ECCO product users to (a) describe the scientific implications of their results, (b) enhance the feedback from the broader community to the Consortium, (c) foster the interaction between ECCO members and other scientists who utilize the state estimates. The oral part (OS41F) will take place on Thursday, Dec. 18th, starting 8am in MW Room 2022. It is preceded by a poster session (OS31C) on Wednesday, Dec. 17th, starting 8am, in MC Hall D.

Sep 2008: An eddy-permitting Southern Ocean State Estimate (SOSE)

As part of his Ph.D. thesis, Matt Mazloff has produced an eddy-permitting state estimate at 1/6 degree horizontal resolution of the Southern Ocean, covering the Argo-rich period 2005/06. The adjoint-based solution is dynamically consistent and enables closed budget calculations of various quantities. Matt's thesis was featured in the SDSC Thread Newsletter, and more recently in WHOI's Oceanus magazine (Corralling the Wild and Wooly Southern Ocean).

21 May 2007: 50 year GECCO solution made available online

A fifty year state estimate covering 1950 to 2000 is now available on the ECCO LAS server at SDSC The estimate was produced by the "German ECCO" (GECCO) group at the University of Hamburg The product is described in Koehl, A., D. Dommenget, K. Ueyoshi, D. Stammer, The Global ECCO 1952 to 2001 Ocean Synthesis Report No.40, March 2006.

 

18 May 2007: New ECCO web page goes live.

In collaboration with web designer Colleen Boisvert ECCO has launched a new overall project web site. Main purpose of this site is to provide an integrated view of ECCO and it's follow-on projects (ECCO-GODAE, ECCO2, GECCO, ...). It is hoped that readers will get a clear understanding of ECCO's various activities, and will find among ECCO's various ocean state estimation products those which best suit their needs. We welcome any feedback you may wish to provide.

 

30 March 2007: Ocean model captures diversity of marine microbes

Scientists at MIT have developed a new marine ecosystem model that allows its populations of phytoplankton to realistically evolve, reflecting the diversity in populations in the natural world. This should lead to a better understanding of the coupling between ocean and atmospheric chemistry. The model makes use of ECCO's ocean state estimate to capture the physical environment in which the ecosystem evolves. The study "Emergent Biogeography of Microbial Communities in a Model Ocean"  by Michael J. Follows, Stephanie Dutkiewicz, Scott Grant, and Sallie W. Chisholm was published in today's issue of Science magazine. It is part of the MIT Darwin Project and funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
(Click here for a related MIT News Story)

 

19 March 2007: ECCO products now hosted on SDSC's SRB archive.

In a collaboration between the San Diego Supercomputing Center (SDSC) and ECCO, a large part of the ECCO products have been transfered to SDSC's Datacentral and managed via Storage Resource Broker (SRB). To make these data available to the community via different commonly used servers and software tools, including DODS/OPeNDAP and LAS, SDSC's DataCentral specialist Roman Olschanowsky and MIT's Constantinos Evangelinos successfully implemented DODS/OPeNDAP on top of SRB. The SRB system allows fast and easy data access across various disk and tape resources while ensuring archiving/backup capability. High speed access to the SDSC data using the SRB client tools is also available.

 

13 December 2006: Carl Wunsch awarded the 2006 William Bowie Medal by the American Geophysical Union

On December, 13, 2006, AGU awarded the Bowie Medal to Carl Wunsch "For his wide-ranging research in the study of the ocean and its roles in shaping Earth's climate and its changes, and for unselfish cooperation in the field of physical oceanography."  Read Citation

 

13 November 2006: Elephant seals serving ECCO

A unique set of roughly 320,000 individual sub-surface measurements of salinity (conductivity), temperature, and depth (CTD) taken by elephant seals which carried bio-logging and telemetry devices was added to the ECCO state estimation system as new observational constraints. The data were kindly provided by the "Southern Elephant Seals as Oceanographic Samplers" (SEaOS) project involving the University of St. Andrew's NERC Sea Mammal Research Unit (SMRU) and the British Antarctic Survey. The uniqueness of the data derives from the ability of seals to go under the sea-ice which covers large parts of the Southern Ocean poleward of 60S during austral winter and where in-situ data are not available otherwise.

 

30 August 2006: NAS Teamwork Helps Researchers Cruise Through Ocean Data

Working with researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL), experts at the NAS facility visualized, in real time, a one-year ocean simulation with 330 million grid cells running on 2,048 processors of the Columbia supercomputer. (Click here for more details)

 

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