Examining CO2 model observation residuals and their implications for
carbon fluxes and transport using ACT-America observations
Abstract
Atmospheric CO2 inversion typically relies on the specification of prior
flux and atmospheric model transport errors, which have large
uncertainties. Here, we use ACT-America 30 airborne observations to
compare total CO 2 model-observation mismatch in the eastern U.S. and
during four climatological seasons for the mesoscale WRF(-Chem) and
global scale CarbonTracker/TM5 (CT) models. Models used identical
surface carbon fluxes, and CT was used as CO 2 boundary condition for
WRF. Both models show reasonable agreement with observations, and CO 2
residuals follow near symmetric peaked (i.e. non-Gaussian) distribution
with near zero bias of both models (CT: −0.34 +/- 3.12 ppm; WRF: 0.82
+/- 4.37 ppm). We also encountered large magnitude residuals at the
tails of the distribution that contribute considerably to overall bias.
Atmospheric boundary-layer biases (1-10 ppm) were much larger than free
tropospheric biases (0.5-1 ppm) and were of same magnitude as
model-model differences, whereas free tropospheric biases were mostly
governed by CO2 background conditions. Results revealed systematic
differences in atmospheric transport, most pronounced in the warm and
cold sectors of synoptic systems, highlighting the importance of
transport for CO2 residuals. While CT could reproduce the principal CO2
dynamics associated with synoptic systems, WRF showed a clearer
distinction for CO2 differences across fronts. Variograms were used to
quantify spatial coherence of residuals and showed characteristic
residual length scales of approximately 100 km to 300 km. Our findings
suggest that inclusion of synoptic weather-dependent and non-Gaussian
error structure may benefit inversion systems.