Reconstructing the Dynamic Sea Surface from Tide Gauge Records Using Optimal Data-Dependent Triangulations
Alina Nitzke, Benjamin Niedermann, Luciana Fenoglio-Marc, J\"urgen, Kusche, Jan-Henrik Haunert

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method for reconstructing long-term sea surface anomalies from tide gauge data using optimized data-dependent triangulations, outperforming traditional methods over decades.
Contribution
The paper develops a min-error data-dependent triangulation approach combined with $k$-order Delaunay triangulation, enabling more accurate long-term sea surface reconstructions from sparse tide gauge data.
Findings
Min-error triangulation outperforms Delaunay for up to 18 years.
$k$-order Delaunay min-error triangulation extends accuracy to 21 years.
Method effectively combines tide gauge data with satellite altimetry.
Abstract
Reconstructions of sea level prior to the satellite altimeter era are usually derived from tide gauge records; however most algorithms for this assume that modes of sea level variability are stationary which is not true over several decades. Here we suggest a method that is based on optimized data-dependent triangulations of the network of gauge stations. Data-dependent triangulations are triangulations of point sets that rely not only on 2D point positions but also on additional data (e.g. elevation, anomalies). In this article, we show how data-dependent triangulations with min-error criteria can be used to reconstruct 2D maps of the sea surface anomaly over a longer time period, assuming that height anomalies are continuously monitored at a sparse set of stations and, in addition, observations of a reference surface is provided over a shorter time period. At the heart of our method…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Scientific Research and Discoveries
