CFS- and CFSR Data

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File:CFSRWindsSample.png
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The CFSR is a third generation reanalysis product. It is a global, high resolution, coupled atmosphere-ocean-land surface-sea ice system designed to provide the best estimate of the state of these coupled domains over this period. The CFSR includes (1) coupling of atmosphere and ocean during the generation of the 6 hour guess field, (2) an interactive sea-ice model, and (3) assimilation of satellite radiances.

Model Resolution and Coverage

The CFSR global atmosphere resolution is ~38 km (T382) with 64 levels.
The global ocean is 0.25° at the equator, extending to a global 0.5° beyond the tropics, with 40 levels.

The model

The global land surface model has 4 soil levels and the global sea ice model has 3 levels. The CFSR atmospheric model contains observed variations in carbon dioxide (CO2), together with changes in aerosols and other trace gases and solar variations. With these variable parameters, the analyzed state will include estimates of changes in the Earth system climate due to these factors.

More information available at: https://climatedataguide.ucar.edu/reanalysis/climate-forecast-system-reanalysis-cfsr


The model grid is 0.5 degree latitude and 2/3 degree longitude.
It holds 1 hourly values in a period from 1979 until present.
Coverage is global for land-areas and coastal regions. Offshore coverage is only to be expected up to approximately 50 km from the coast line.

Data Availability

MERRA data is commonly available within WindPRO with a time-tag of 1-2 months. This is due to the processing time of the data at NASA and the subset-processing at EMD. When the data has been processed at EMD, then the following parameters are available from within the online-dataservices WindPRO. Please note that the displacement height is the height at which the log wind profile projects the wind to be zero. See more at the MERRA-FAQ.

Table: Overview of MERRA Dataset Parameters.
Parameter Description
time UTC time stamp
pressure Sea level pressure
temperature Temperature at 2 m above the displacement height
wDir Wind direction at 50 m above surface
wSpeed Wind speed at 50 m above surface
dispHeight Displacement height

Data Experiences

Generally, the MERRA data is always considered when seeking for candidate reference wind datasets for a particular site. Correlation between local measurements and MERRA data is often high, see the figure below. For his particular study made in 2010, MERRA data was compared against NCEP/NCAR, 3Tier (commercial data) and SYNOP data.

Comparing Tall Mast data (Risø) to NCEP/NCAR, 3Tier, MERRA and SYNOP data

External Links

Acknowledgement

Credits: The Global Modeling and Assimilation Office (GMAO) for the MERRA-analysis and the GES DISC for the dissemination of MERRA.