Consistent Predictability of the Ocean State Ocean Model (OSOM) using
Information Theory and Flushing Timescales
Abstract
The Ocean State Ocean Model OSOM is an application of the Regional Ocean
Modeling System spanning the Rhode Island waterways, including
Narragansett Bay, Mt. Hope Bay, larger rivers, and the Block Island
Shelf circulation from Long Island to Nantucket. This paper discusses
the physical aspects of the estuary (Narragansett and Mount Hope Bays
and larger rivers) to evaluate physical circulation predictability. This
estimate is intended to help decide if a forecast and prediction system
is warranted, to prepare for coupling with biogeochemistry and fisheries
models with widely disparate timescales, and to find the spin-up time
needed to establish the climatological circulation of the region.
Perturbed initial condition ensemble simulations are combined with
metrics from information theory to quantify the predictability of the
OSOM forecast system–i.e., how long anomalies from different initial
conditions persist. The predictability timescale in this model agrees
with readily estimable timescales such as the freshwater flushing
timescale evaluated using the total exchange flow (TEF) framework,
indicating that the estuarine dynamics rather than chaotic transport is
the dominant model behavior limiting predictions. The predictability of
the OSOM is ~ 7 to 40 days, varying with parameters,
region, and season.