Introduction to the OSSE/OSE Project
This project encompasses several well-established atmospheric OSSE/OSE
efforts currently existing at Goddard. It is funded under the
NASA MAP program with the research
title: "Observing System Experiments
(OSE and OSSE) to Evaluate and Enhance the Impact of Current
and Future Satellite Observations."
The project is managed by Dr. Oreste Reale of the Goddard Laboratory
for Atmospheres (GLA). Dr. Juan Carlos Jusem, also of the GLA,
provides valuable expertise to the OSSE/OSE effort. The Software
Integration and Visualization Office (SIVO) provides support
to the GLA in the form of software development, experiment
execution, data management, and assistance with certain scientific
tasks. The GLA and SIVO OSSE/OSE team have formed or maintained
collaborations with many research groups, both outside and
within NASA, to help promote satellite research through the
use of OSSE's and OSE's. These groups include GSFC researchers
in the Global Modeling and Assimilation
Office (GMAO) and Sounder Reserach Team (SRT);
NOAA researchers at NCEP, ESRL and AOML; and the private research
company Simpson Weather Associates.
OSSE Description
An Observing System Simulation Experiment, or OSSE, is a type of observing
system experiment in which synthetic meteorological observations
are used as a surrogate for real observations. The assimilation
of these observations and subsequent free forecasts are conducted
the same as with real observations. The synthetic obs are usually
extracted from a long forecast from a high resolution, state-of-the
art model, known as a "nature run", which acts
as a proxy atmosphere specifically for the OSSE. The primary
objective of an OSSE is to assess the potential impact on NWP
of assimilating observations from proposed/future observing
systems. In this way, the benefits of an observing system can
be estimated before it is designed, built and launched into
orbit. Trade-offs in instrument or orbital configurations and
methods of assimilating a new type of observing system can
be determined by an OSSE and ultimately result in both time
and cost savings. Data impact experiments, in which synthetic
observations from existing and proposed observing systems are
added or removed from the experiment, can identify an optimal
configuration for a future observing network and help recognize
weaknesses in the processing or assimilation of the observations.
The same data assimilation systems, models, and diagnostic
tools used for performing OSE's are also used for OSSE's.
Why Perform OSSE's?
- The costs of designing, building, and maintaining new instruments
are very high
- To quantify impacts of new instruments
- To test design trade-offs for a particular instrument
- To prepare data assimlations systems for optimal use of new observation
types
OSSE Players
+ Player Diagram
Methodology
For OSSE's, the nature run is a proxy for the real atmosphere. It is
from the nature run dataset that simulated observations are generated.
As with real observations measured in the real atmosphere, simulated
observations are assimilated both with and without certain observing
systems included. Forecasts are then executed from these assimilations.
The output from both the assimilations and forecasts are evaluated in
a variety of ways. The results of the evaluation can be used to either
calibrate the OSSE system to enhance realism, or to tune various components
of the system to improve performance. This can feedback to the nature
run, the method used to simulate observations, or the Data Assimilation
System (DAS).
In the initial iterations through this cycle, comparisons are made
between experiments using simulated and real observations, both using
the same DAS and forecast model. Inconsistencies in results between
the simulated world and real world may necessitate a calibration of
one or more components of the OSSE system. Calibration may involve,
for example, improving the errors that are applied to the simulated
observations or enhancing certain nature run fields to achieve greater
realism.
After the initial calibration is performed, the OSSE system is ready
for actual experiments with new observing systems. At this point, another
iterative process will commence in which simulated observations from
new
instruments are introduced. Results of assimilations and forecasts
with and without these new observations are evaluated. The nature run
provides the truth data against which all of these simulated experiments
are verified. Impacts that are neutral or negative, i.e. below the expectations
of the new instrument, will require tuning of one or more OSSE components.
The tuning may involve, for example, super-obbing or thinning of the
simulated observations, refining the observation error estimates used
in the DAS, or introducing an improvement to the DAS itself all of which
would be designed to increase the usefulness of the observations and
ultimately improve impact.
+ Methodology diagram
Diagrams of Key OSSE Components
+ OSSE Flow diagram
+ Example of spin-up for an OSSE Experiment
+ Example of Assimilation and Forecast
Execution
+ Basic Schematic for Evaluating an OSSE
OSSE Collaborators
+ GMAO (Goddard Modeling and Assimilation
Office)
Dr. Michele Rienecker, Head
Dr. Rienecker provides the OSSE/OSE group with access to the GEOS-5
DAS with which all experiments are conducted.
Dr. Lars Peter Riishojgaard, Acting Director of the JCSDA.
Dr. Riishojgaard is the GMAO's main point of contact for the OSSE/OSE
group and provides valuable scientific advice for many of the
group's activities.
+ NOAA/NCEP
Dr. Stephen Lord, Head
Dr. Michiko Masutani is the NCEP's main point of contact for the OSSE/OSE
group and interacts with the group on many OSSE activities.
+ Simpson Weather Associates
Dr. David Emmitt, President
Dr. Emmitt provides a variety of simulated lidar data to the OSSE/OSE
group for detailed evaluation using the GEOS-DAS.
+ NOAA/AOML (Atlantic Oceanographic
Meteorological Laboratory)
Dr. Robert Atlas, Head
Dr. Atlas was the original PI for the OSSE/OSE efforts at NASA
and continues to interact with the OSSE/OSE group.
+ NOAA/ESRL (Earth System Research
Laboratory)
Dr. Alexander McDonald, Head
Dr. Tom Schlatter is the main point of contact. ESRL contributes to the development
of the OSSE framework for the Joint OSSE effort.
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