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Dive into the research topics where Maria Valdivieso is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Valdivieso.


Climate Dynamics | 2017

Intercomparison of the Arctic sea ice cover in global ocean–sea ice reanalyses from the ORA-IP project

Matthieu Chevallier; Gregory C. Smith; Frédéric Dupont; Jean-François Lemieux; Gael Forget; Yosuke Fujii; Fabrice Hernandez; Rym Msadek; K. Andrew Peterson; Andrea Storto; Takahiro Toyoda; Maria Valdivieso; Guillaume Vernieres; Hao Zuo; Magdalena A. Balmaseda; You-Soon Chang; Nicolas Ferry; Gilles Garric; Keith Haines; Sarah Keeley; Robin Kovach; Tsurane Kuragano; Simona Masina; Yongming Tang; Hiroyuki Tsujino; Xiaochun Wang

AbstractOcean–sea ice reanalyses are crucial for assessing the variability and recent trends in the Arctic sea ice cover. This is especially true for sea ice volume, as long-term and large scale sea ice thickness observations are inexistent. Results from the Ocean ReAnalyses Intercomparison Project (ORA-IP) are presented, with a focus on Arctic sea ice fields reconstructed by state-of-the-art global ocean reanalyses. Differences between the various reanalyses are explored in terms of the effects of data assimilation, model physics and atmospheric forcing on properties of the sea ice cover, including concentration, thickness, velocity and snow. Amongst the 14 reanalyses studied here, 9 assimilate sea ice concentration, and none assimilate sea ice thickness data. The comparison reveals an overall agreement in the reconstructed concentration fields, mainly because of the constraints in surface temperature imposed by direct assimilation of ocean observations, prescribed or assimilated atmospheric forcing and assimilation of sea ice concentration. However, some spread still exists amongst the reanalyses, due to a variety of factors. In particular, a large spread in sea ice thickness is found within the ensemble of reanalyses, partially caused by the biases inherited from their sea ice model components. Biases are also affected by the assimilation of sea ice concentration and the treatment of sea ice thickness in the data assimilation process. An important outcome of this study is that the spatial distribution of ice volume varies widely between products, with no reanalysis standing out as clearly superior as compared to altimetry estimates. The ice thickness from systems without assimilation of sea ice concentration is not worse than that from systems constrained with sea ice observations. An evaluation of the sea ice velocity fields reveals that ice drifts too fast in most systems. As an ensemble, the ORA-IP reanalyses capture trends in Arctic sea ice area and extent relatively well. However, the ensemble can not be used to get a robust estimate of recent trends in the Arctic sea ice volume. Biases in the reanalyses certainly impact the simulated air–sea fluxes in the polar regions, and questions the suitability of current sea ice reanalyses to initialize seasonal forecasts.


Climate Dynamics | 2017

An ensemble of eddy-permitting global ocean reanalyses from the MyOcean project

Simona Masina; Andrea Storto; Nicolas Ferry; Maria Valdivieso; Keith Haines; Magdalena A. Balmaseda; Hao Zuo; Marie Drevillon; Laurent Parent

A set of four eddy-permitting global ocean reanalyses produced in the framework of the MyOcean project have been compared over the altimetry period 1993–2011. The main differences among the reanalyses used here come from the data assimilation scheme implemented to control the ocean state by inserting reprocessed observations of sea surface temperature (SST), in situ temperature and salinity profiles, sea level anomaly and sea-ice concentration. A first objective of this work includes assessing the interannual variability and trends for a series of parameters, usually considered in the community as essential ocean variables: SST, sea surface salinity, temperature and salinity averaged over meaningful layers of the water column, sea level, transports across pre-defined sections, and sea ice parameters. The eddy-permitting nature of the global reanalyses allows also to estimate eddy kinetic energy. The results show that in general there is a good consistency between the different reanalyses. An intercomparison against experiments without data assimilation was done during the MyOcean project and we conclude that data assimilation is crucial for correctly simulating some quantities such as regional trends of sea level as well as the eddy kinetic energy. A second objective is to show that the ensemble mean of reanalyses can be evaluated as one single system regarding its reliability in reproducing the climate signals, where both variability and uncertainties are assessed through the ensemble spread and signal-to-noise ratio. The main advantage of having access to several reanalyses differing in the way data assimilation is performed is that it becomes possible to assess part of the total uncertainty. Given the fact that we use very similar ocean models and atmospheric forcing, we can conclude that the spread of the ensemble of reanalyses is mainly representative of our ability to gauge uncertainty in the assimilation methods. This uncertainty changes a lot from one ocean parameter to another, especially in global indices. However, despite several caveats in the design of the multi-system ensemble, the main conclusion from this study is that an eddy-permitting multi-system ensemble approach has become mature and our results provide a first step towards a systematic comparison of eddy-permitting global ocean reanalyses aimed at providing robust conclusions on the recent evolution of the oceanic state.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Evaluation of satellite and reanalysis‐based global net surface energy flux and uncertainty estimates

Chunlei Liu; Richard P. Allan; Michael Mayer; Patrick Hyder; Norman Loeb; C. D. Roberts; Maria Valdivieso; John M. Edwards; Pier Luigi Vidale

Abstract The net surface energy flux is central to the climate system yet observational limitations lead to substantial uncertainty. A combination of satellite‐derived radiative fluxes at the top of atmosphere adjusted using the latest estimation of the net heat uptake of the Earth system, and the atmospheric energy tendencies and transports from the ERA‐Interim reanalysis are used to estimate surface energy flux globally. To consider snowmelt and improve regional realism, land surface fluxes are adjusted through a simple energy balance approach at each grid point. This energy adjustment is redistributed over the oceans to ensure energy conservation and maintain realistic global ocean heat uptake, using a weighting function to avoid meridional discontinuities. Calculated surface energy fluxes are evaluated through comparison to ocean reanalyses. Derived turbulent energy flux variability is compared with the Objectively Analyzed air‐sea Fluxes (OAFLUX) product, and inferred meridional energy transports in the global ocean and the Atlantic are also evaluated using observations. Uncertainties in surface fluxes are investigated using a variety of approaches including comparison with a range of atmospheric reanalysis products. Decadal changes in the global mean and the interhemispheric energy imbalances are quantified, and present day cross‐equator heat transports are reevaluated at 0.22 ± 0.15 PW (petawatts) southward by the atmosphere and 0.32 ± 0.16 PW northward by the ocean considering the observed ocean heat sinks.


Climate Dynamics | 2017

An assessment of air–sea heat fluxes from ocean and coupled reanalyses

Maria Valdivieso; Keith Haines; Magdalena A. Balmaseda; You-Soon Chang; Marie Drevillon; Nicolas Ferry; Yosuke Fujii; Armin Köhl; Andrea Storto; Takahiro Toyoda; Xiaochun Wang; J. Waters; Yan Xue; Yonghong Yin; Bernard Barnier; Fabrice Hernandez; Arun Kumar; Tong Lee; Simona Masina; K. Andrew Peterson


Geoscientific Model Development | 2016

OMIP contribution to CMIP6: experimental and diagnostic protocol for the physical component of the Ocean Model Intercomparison Project

Stephen M. Griffies; Gokhan Danabasoglu; Paul J. Durack; Alistair J. Adcroft; Venkatramani Balaji; Claus W. Böning; Eric P. Chassignet; Enrique N. Curchitser; Julie Deshayes; Helge Drange; Baylor Fox-Kemper; Peter J. Gleckler; Jonathan M. Gregory; Helmuth Haak; Robert Hallberg; Patrick Heimbach; Helene T. Hewitt; David M. Holland; Tatiana Ilyina; Johann H. Jungclaus; Yoshiki Komuro; John P. Krasting; William G. Large; Simon J. Marsland; Simona Masina; Trevor J. McDougall; A. J. George Nurser; James C. Orr; Anna Pirani; Fangli Qiao


Ocean Science | 2012

Transports and budgets in a 1/4 ° global ocean reanalysis 1989–2010

Keith Haines; Maria Valdivieso; Hao Zuo; V. N. Stepanov


Climate Dynamics | 2017

Ocean heat content variability and change in an ensemble of ocean reanalyses

Matthew D. Palmer; C. D. Roberts; Magdalena A. Balmaseda; You-Soon Chang; G. Chepurin; Nicolas Ferry; Yosuke Fujii; Simon A. Good; S. Guinehut; Keith Haines; Fabrice Hernandez; Armin Köhl; Tong Lee; Matthew Martin; Simona Masina; Shuhei Masuda; K. A. Peterson; Andrea Storto; Takahiro Toyoda; Maria Valdivieso; Guillaume Vernieres; Ou Wang; Yan Xue


Climate Dynamics | 2017

Steric sea level variability (1993–2010) in an ensemble of ocean reanalyses and objective analyses

Andrea Storto; Simona Masina; Magdalena A. Balmaseda; S. Guinehut; Yan Xue; Tanguy Szekely; Ichiro Fukumori; Gael Forget; You-Soon Chang; Simon A. Good; Armin Köhl; Guillaume Vernieres; Nicolas Ferry; K. Andrew Peterson; David W. Behringer; Masayoshi Ishii; Shuhei Masuda; Yosuke Fujii; Takahiro Toyoda; Yonghong Yin; Maria Valdivieso; Bernard Barnier; Timothy P. Boyer; Tony E. Lee; Jérome Gourrion; Ou Wang; Patrick Heimback; Anthony Rosati; Robin Kovach; Fabrice Hernandez


Climate Dynamics | 2017

Intercomparison and validation of the mixed layer depth fields of global ocean syntheses

Takahiro Toyoda; Yosuke Fujii; Tsurane Kuragano; Masafumi Kamachi; Yoichi Ishikawa; Shuhei Masuda; Kanako Sato; Toshiyuki Awaji; Fabrice Hernandez; Nicolas Ferry; S. Guinehut; Matthew Martin; K. Andrew Peterson; Simon A. Good; Maria Valdivieso; Keith Haines; Andrea Storto; Simona Masina; Armin Köhl; Hao Zuo; Magdalena A. Balmaseda; Yonghong Yin; Li Shi; Oscar Alves; Gregory C. Smith; You-Soon Chang; Guillaume Vernieres; Xiaochun Wang; Gael Forget; Patrick Heimbach


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Freshwater and heat transports from global ocean synthesis

Maria Valdivieso; Keith Haines; Hao Zuo; D. J. Lea

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Hao Zuo

European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts

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Takahiro Toyoda

Japan Meteorological Agency

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Yosuke Fujii

Japan Meteorological Agency

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Fabrice Hernandez

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Magdalena A. Balmaseda

European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts

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You-Soon Chang

Kongju National University

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Xiaochun Wang

University of California

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