Authors
Alberto Carrassi, Marc Bocquet, Laurent Bertino, Geir Evensen
Publication date
2018/9
Source
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change
Volume
9
Issue
5
Pages
e535
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Description
We commonly refer to state estimation theory in geosciences as data assimilation (DA). This term encompasses the entire sequence of operations that, starting from the observations of a system, and from additional statistical and dynamical information (such as a dynamical evolution model), provides an estimate of its state. DA is standard practice in numerical weather prediction, but its application is becoming widespread in many other areas of climate, atmosphere, ocean, and environment modeling; in all circumstances where one intends to estimate the state of a large dynamical system based on limited information. While the complexity of DA, and of the methods thereof, stands on its interdisciplinary nature across statistics, dynamical systems, and numerical optimization, when applied to geosciences, an additional difficulty arises by the continually increasing sophistication of the environmental models. Thus, in …
Total citations
201720182019202020212022202320243146275959613393
Scholar articles
A Carrassi, M Bocquet, L Bertino, G Evensen - Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 2018