Water exchange through the Kerama Gap estimated with a 25-year Pacific HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 1287-1302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenzheng Zhou ◽  
Fei Yu ◽  
Feng Nan
2015 ◽  
Vol 96 ◽  
pp. 203-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhitao Yu ◽  
E. Joseph Metzger ◽  
Prasad Thoppil ◽  
Harley E. Hurlburt ◽  
Luis Zamudio ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 69 (8) ◽  
pp. 899-911 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhitao Yu ◽  
Edward J. Metzger ◽  
Harley E. Hurlburt ◽  
Ole Martin Smedstad

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaoyu Yang ◽  
Haibin Ye

AbstractA coastal front was detected in the eastern Guangdong (EGD) coastal waters during a downwelling-favorable wind period by using the diffuse attenuation coefficient at 490 nm (Kd(490)). Long-term satellite data, meteorological data and hydrographic data collected from 2003 to 2017 were jointly utilized to analyze the environmental factors affecting coastal fronts. The intensities of the coastal fronts were found to be associated with the downwelling intensity. The monthly mean Kd(490) anomalies in shallow coastal waters less than 25 m deep along the EGD coast and the monthly mean Ekman pumping velocities retrieved by the ERA5 dataset were negatively correlated, with a Pearson correlation of − 0.71. The fronts started in October, became weaker and gradually disappeared after January, extending southwestward from the southeastern coast of Guangdong Province to the Wanshan Archipelago in the South China Sea (SCS). The cross-frontal differences in the mean Kd(490) values could reach 3.7 m−1. Noticeable peaks were found in the meridional distribution of the mean Kd(490) values at 22.5°N and 22.2°N and in the zonal distribution of the mean Kd(490) values at 114.7°E and 114.4°E. The peaks tended to narrow as the latitude increased. The average coastal surface currents obtained from the global Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) showed that waters with high nutrient and sediment contents in the Fujian and Zhejiang coastal areas in the southern part of the East China Sea could flow into the SCS. The directions and lengths of the fronts were found to be associated with the flow advection.


2005 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Birol Kara ◽  
Alan J. Wallcraft ◽  
Harley E. Hurlburt

Abstract A 1/25° × 1/25° cos(lat) (longitude × latitude) (≈3.2-km resolution) eddy-resolving Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) is introduced for the Black Sea and used to examine the effects of ocean turbidity on upper-ocean circulation features including sea surface height and mixed layer depth (MLD) on annual mean climatological time scales. The model is a primitive equation model with a K-profile parameterization (KPP) mixed layer submodel. It uses a hybrid vertical coordinate that combines the advantages of isopycnal, σ, and z-level coordinates in optimally simulating coastal and open-ocean circulation features. This model approach is applied to the Black Sea for the first time. HYCOM uses a newly developed time-varying solar penetration scheme that treats attenuation as a continuous quantity. This scheme includes two bands of solar radiation penetration, one that is needed in the top 10 m of the water column and another that penetrates to greater depths depending on the turbidity. Thus, it is suitable for any ocean general circulation model that has fine vertical resolution near the surface. With this scheme, the optical depth–dependent attenuation of subsurface heating in HYCOM is given by monthly mean fields for the attenuation of photosynthetically active radiation (kPAR) during 1997–2001. These satellite-based climatological kPAR fields are derived from Sea-Viewing Wide Field-of-View Sensor (SeaWiFS) data for the spectral diffuse attenuation coefficient at 490 nm (k490) and have been processed to have the smoothly varying and continuous coverage necessary for use in the Black Sea model applications. HYCOM simulations are driven by two sets of high-frequency climatological forcing, but no assimilation of ocean data is then used to demonstrate the importance of including spatial and temporal varying attenuation depths for the annual mean prediction of upper-ocean quantities in the Black Sea, which is very turbid (kPAR > 0.15 m−1, in general). Results are reported from three model simulations driven by each atmospheric forcing set using different values for the kPAR. A constant solar-attenuation optical depth of ≈17 m (clear water assumption), as opposed to using spatially and temporally varying attenuation depths, changes the surface circulation, especially in the eastern Black Sea. Unrealistic sub–mixed layer heating in the former results in weaker stratification at the base of the mixed layer and a deeper MLD than observed. As a result, the deep MLD off Sinop (at around 42.5°N, 35.5°E) weakens the surface currents regardless of the atmospheric forcing used in the model simulations. Using the SeaWiFS-based monthly turbidity climatology gives a shallower MLD with much stronger stratification at the base and much better agreement with observations. Because of the high Black Sea turbidity, the simulation with all solar radiation absorbed at the surface case gives results similar to the simulations using turbidity from SeaWiFS in the annual means, the aspect of the results investigated in this paper.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 1547-1561
Author(s):  
Elizabeth M. Douglass ◽  
Andrea C. Mask

AbstractAs numerical modeling advances, quantitative metrics are necessary to determine whether the model output accurately represents the observed ocean. Here, a metric is developed based on whether a model places oceanic fronts in the proper location. Fronts are observed and assessed directly from along-track satellite altimetry. Numerical model output is then interpolated to the locations of the along-track data, and fronts are detected in the model output. Scores are determined from the percentage of observed fronts correctly simulated in the model and from the percentage of modeled fronts confirmed by observations. These scores depend on certain parameters such as the minimum size of a front, which will be shown to be geographically dependent. An analysis of two models, the Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) and the Navy Coastal Ocean Model (NCOM), is presented as an example of how this metric might be applied and interpreted. In this example, scores are found to be relatively stable in time, but strongly dependent on the mesoscale variability in the region of interest. In all cases, the metric indicates that there are more observed fronts not found in the models than there are modeled fronts missing from observations. In addition to the score itself, the analysis demonstrates that modeled fronts have smaller amplitude and are less steep than observed fronts.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Cristina Pinto de Almeida Palmeira ◽  
Ricardo de Camargo ◽  
Ronaldo Maia de Jesus Palmeira

Neste artigo investigou-se a importância da variação da camada de mistura oceânica (CMO) na temperatura da superfície do mar (TSM), sob a influencia de ciclones extratropicais atmosféricos. Um modelo simplificado de CMO oriundo do modelo HYCOM (Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model), baseado no modelo de Kraus e Turner, foi inserido como uma sub-rotina do modelo BRAMS (Brazilian Regional Atmospheric Modelling System), para atualizar a TSM a cada passo de tempo no modelo atmosférico. A CMO-BRAMS caracterizou-se por estreitar durante as trajetórias das baixas pressões, embora não tenha indicado um significativo aprofundamento seguindo o anticiclone da retaguarda do sistema frontal. A TSM calculada pela CMO do BRAMS apresentou grande variação (1°C-5°C) nos instantes iniciais. Entretanto, uma vez ajustada houve pouca variação da TSM no decorrer do tempo (1,0°C-2,5°C), com o aprofundamento (estreitamento) da CMO associada à diminuição (aumento) à temperatura.


2006 ◽  
pp. 413-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric P. Chassignet ◽  
Harley E. Hurlburt ◽  
Ole Martin Smedstad ◽  
George R. Halliwell ◽  
Patrick J. Hogan ◽  
...  

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