summary of issues and conclusions from dmqc-4 1.pressure issues, especially surface pressure offset,...

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Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures 2.Other issues

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Combined Apf-9 data from BSH, UW, and CSIRO, up until 22 August Occurrence rate up until Mar 09 Pre-2008~ 3% UW ice floats Jan % (after 14 months) UW + SIO floats Kaharoa Oct % (after 5 months) Both occurrence rate and oil leak rate have increased! Some floats die early, others take a long time to diagnose

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Page 1: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4

1. Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

2. Other issues

Page 2: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

All delayed-mode groups to be aware of increased possibility of SBE CTDs developing the Druck microleak disease.

This disease manifests itself as a negative pressure error that increases with time, with the end stage being bad data that are uncorrectable.

Expect about 30% occurrence rate for floats deployed in 2007 and later. Oil leak rate varies.

Page 3: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Combined Apf-9 data from BSH, UW, and CSIRO, up until 22 August 2009.

Occurrence rate up until Mar 09

Pre-2008 ~ 3%

UW ice floats Jan 2008 18%(after 14 months)

UW + SIO floatsKaharoa Oct 2008 28%(after 5 months)

Both occurrence rate and oil leak rate have increased!

Some floats die early, others take a long time to diagnose

Page 4: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Stephanie Guinehut’s altimetry QC can detect errors that correspond to about 5 cm of dynamic height.

Because of the thermal structure of the ocean, this is equivalent to about 10 dbar pressure error in the tropics, but about 50 dbar at high latitude.

Therefore the altimetry QC will be most useful at latitudes < 30.

Page 5: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

APEX APF8 with Truncated Negative Pressure Drift(TNPD)

For such APEX floats, if the Surface Pressure ‘hovers around zero’ there is no problem.

If Surface Pressure becomes ‘persistently’ zero, but other data are ‘sensible’ the unknown surface pressure offset is negative. The magnitude is unknown but probably < ~ 20 dbar if the other data have no obvious problem. When such a float is identified, DM proposes: (see next page)

Page 6: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Recommendations from DMQC-4For TNPD floats with persistently zero surface pressure

For APEX Apf-5, Apf-7, Apf-8 (all firmwares that truncate

negative surface pressure values), when a large portion of the SP time series (nominally 80%) records absolute zero AND T/S does not show anomaly, it means the float may be experiencing undetectable negative pressure error. In those cases:

PRES_ADJUSTED_QC = ‘2’TEMP_ADJUSTED_QC = ‘2’PSAL_ADJUSTED_QC = ‘2’

SCIENTIFIC_CALIB_COMMENT = “TNPD: APEX float that truncated negative pressure drift. Other operator comments,……”

Page 7: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Recommendations from DMQC-4For TNPD floats with persistently zero surface pressure

If fhere is an apparent T/S anomaly, it is very likely that

there is a pressure problem and the flags should be ‘3’ or ‘4’ depending on severity of the anomaly.

A negative PRES error will lead to a positive PSAL error, and a cold TEMP anomaly whose size depends on vertical TEMP gradient

If the float is telemetering highly erratic data, it is a sign that the microleak problem is about to reach its endpoint. Previous cycles may need to be reviewed.

Page 8: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Recommendations from DMQC-4For TNPD floats with persistently zero surface pressure

(continued)

Justin Buck & Mathieu Ouellet to consult their assimilation groups about how they use PRES_ADJUSTED_ERROR and to suggest to DM community what value should be assigned for APEX TNPDs to ensure that these data are treated appropriately by those groups.

Page 9: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

To be decided by the RT DACs

For the cases of APEX TNPDs, what to do with

PRES_QC, TEMP_QC, PSAL_QC?

Comment: When the pressure goes really bad, the float will go on the greylist.

Before that time, DM suggests that in real time, PRES_QC, TEMP_QC, PSAL_QC should be ‘2’ in the GDAC files. Should these data be transmitted on the GTS ?

Page 10: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Other considerations from DMQC-4For floats with microleaks

1) Be aware that if the pressure offset is <~ 10 dbar, the error may be independent of depth, so a simple pressure adjustment is appropriate; but if pressure offset is >~ 10 dbar, the error may vary with both PRES & TEMP

2) Chair AST will write to SBE and ask them to characterise pressure errors from microleaks for the sensors they have already identified as bad in their laboratory tests

Page 11: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

6. Birgit Klein to study effects of CellTM correction in the North Atlantic with currently available coefficients and estimated ascent rate.

DMQC-4 other issues CellTM

Page 12: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

7. All delayed-mode groups to download D file format check output from ftp kakapo.ucsd.edu (anonymous login) cd /pub/gilson/DMQC4 and to correct the format errors. (GDAC checks new files and rejects failures)

8. In order to squeeze D format errors out of existing D files, John Gilson to perform D file format check every quarter in conjunction with updating the SIO Argo climatology. Summary table to be published in the AIC Monthly Report. Detail output to be made available via ftp from Coriolis in conjunction with the SIO Argo climatology.

DMQC-4 other issues D format checks

Page 13: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

9. Annie Wong to collate regional parameter information from all delayed-mode operators. Sylvie to host DMQC webpage at the Coriolis Data Management website. User login or public? Web page is not interactive, but is updated as new information is collated.

10. All delayed-mode operators to edit raw qc flags (PARAM_QC) in delayed-mode, to preserve pointwise information about spikes, jumps, etc incorrectly flagged by automatic RT tests.

DMQC-4 collating information about DMQC detailed practices

Editing raw flags

Page 14: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

11. A suggestion was made that if PSAL is adjusted in delayed-mode, then PSAL_QC should be ‘3’ because ‘These data should not be used without scientific correction’. Agreement was not reached on whether to instruct all DM operators to adopt this. Some DACs/DM operators may choose to do this if they wish.

DMQC-4 Editing raw flags (continued)

Page 15: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

12. The question was posed: ‘Should we remove D files that haven’t been reprocessed for surface pressure offset, and restore them when the DM operator has completed the task ?’

The answer was:

‘No. We cannot afford to lose that many D files; DACs should fix them as a high priority’. If it is critical to users to know whether surface pressure has been adjusted, they must read the SCIENTIFIC_CALIBRATION_COMMENT.’

DMQC-4 other issues

Page 16: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Change in thinking of data variables(reflects the way DM community has viewed data for some time)

REAL-TIME versus DELAYED-MODE→ 2 stages of data quality control

RAW versus ADJUSTED→ 2 types of data

Page 17: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

Change definitions of PARAM and PARAM_QC in User’s Manual and QC Manual:

▪ PARAM contains the raw values telemetered from the floats. PARAM = PRES, TEMP, CNDC, PSAL.(DOXY will have its own definition.)

▪ PARAM_QC contains qc flags that give information about the values in PARAM. Values in PARAM_QC are set initially in ‘R’ and ‘A’ modes by the automatic real-time tests. They are later modified in ‘D’ mode at levels where the qc flags are set incorrectly by the real-time procedures, and where erroneous data are not detected by the real-time procedures.

Page 18: Summary of issues and conclusions from DMQC-4 1.Pressure Issues, especially Surface pressure offset, Druck microleak, APEXs that truncate negative pressures

TEOS-10: Approved by IOC June 2009 for use from Jan 2010 onwards

DMQC-4 reviewed the impact of TEOS-10 on the DM process, which will be small

TEOS-10 libraries available in Matlab & FORTRAN; c will come in due course

Note that the salinity argument for the TEOS-10 algorithms is Absolute Salinity SA =~ 1.004715 *PSAL + regional composition anomaly of magnitude <~ 0.02.

function SA = gsw_ASal(PSAL,PRES,LON,LAT)function result = gsw_pden(SA,t,p,pr)function result = gsw_ptmp(SA,t,p,pr)

Extends algorithms to larger ranges, which were not defined for PSAL & EOS80( 0 < S < 120; T < 80)

Units of SA are g/kg

DMQC-4 other issues: TEOS-10Thermodynamic Equation Of Seawater - 2010

www.teos-10.org, (top hit for “teos-10” in google)