Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (Oct 2021)
The Improved Localized Equivalent-Weights Particle Filter with Statistical Observation in an Intermediate Coupled Model
Abstract
Data assimilation has been widely applied in atmospheric and oceanic forecasting systems and particle filters (PFs) have unique advantages in dealing with nonlinear data assimilation. They have been applied to many scientific fields, but their application in geoscientific systems is limited because of their inefficiency in standard settings systems. To address these issues, this paper further refines the statistical observation and localization scheme which used in the classic localized equivalent-weights particle filter with statistical observation (LEWPF-Sobs). The improved method retains the advantages of equivalent-weights particle filter (EWPF) and the localized particle filter (LPF), while further refinements incorporate the effect of time series on the reanalyzed data into the statistical observation calculations, in addition to incorporating the statistical observation proposal density into the localization scheme to further improve the assimilation accuracy under sparse observation conditions. In order to better simulate the geoscientific system, we choose an intermediate atmosphere-ocean-land coupled model (COAL-IC) as the experimental model and divide the experiment into two parts: standard observation and sparse observation, which are analyzed by the spatial distribution results and root mean square error (RMSE) histogram. In order to better analyze the characteristics of the improved method, this method was chosen to be analyzed in comparison with the localized weighted ensemble Kalman filter (LWEnKF), the LPF and classical LEWPF-Sobs. From the experimental results, it can be seen that the improved method is better than the LWEnKF and LPF methods for various observation conditions. The improved method reduces the RMSE by about 7% under standard observation conditions compared to the traditional method, while the advantage of the improved method is even more obvious under sparse observation conditions, where the RMSE is reduced by about 85% compared to the traditional method. In particular, this improved filter not only combine the advantage of the two algorithms, but also overcome the computing resources.
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