The TropFlux heat and momentum fluxes are estimated from the COARE v3
algorithm (Fairall et al. 2003),
arguably one of the most suited algorithm for fluxes estimations in the
tropical regions.
This algorithm requests surface meteorological parameters (10m-winds,
2m-air and sea temperature, 2m-air relative humidity) and downward
radiative (shortwave and infrared fluxes) as input parameters.
The analysis of various data sources shows that, except for shortwave
radiation, ERA-I data generally displays the best agreement to the
Global Tropical Moored Buoy Array
data, despite systematic biases and underestimated variability
Praveen Kumar et al. 2012.
The ISCCP provides the best shortwave data.
TropFlux hence uses bias and amplitude corrected ERA-I (10m-winds, 2m-air
and sea temperature, 2m-air relative humidity and downward radiative
fluxes) and ISCCP (shortwave radiation) fluxes.
All bias corrections are derived on the basis of comparisons with
the
Global Tropical Moored Buoy Array
data, and are described in detail in
Praveen Kumar et al. 2012.
An additional climatological surface temperature-dependent gustiness
is applied to wind speed, in order to account for unresolved (sub-daily and subgrid-scale) variability.
Since ISCCP shortwave data
is not updated on a regular basis, we provide an alternative shortwave
flux estimate that is less accurate, but available until present.
This estimate uses the ISCCP shortwave climatology plus anomalies that are
linearly related to NOAA Outgoing Longwave Radiation anomalies with respect to the seasonal cycle.
Such an estimate is almost as good as ISCCP in deep atmospheric convection
regions such as the ITCZ or Indo-Pacific warm pool.
It does not perform as well as ISCCP in regions of low clouds such as the
eastern equatorial Pacific and Atlantic oceans, but is in any case better
than most available re-analyses in those regions
(Praveen Kumar et al. 2012).
The net surface shortwave that is provided in TropFlux data files is based
on ISCCP data over the entire period for which it is available (July 1983
to December 2009 at the time of writing), with a linear transition to
OLR-derived shortwave over a three months window at the edges of the
ISCCP-availability window.