scholarly journals Interplay between Asian Monsoon and Tides Affects the Plume Dispersal of the New Hu-Wei River off the Coast of Midwest Taiwan

Water ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 152
Author(s):  
Chia-Ying Ho ◽  
Tien-Hsi Fang ◽  
Cheng-Han Wu ◽  
Hung-Jen Lee

In the coupled estuary–shelf system, plumes originating from the New Hu-Wei and Choshui rivers, consisting of many terrestrial materials, could contaminate the water of the Mailiao industrial harbor. To determine the contribution of the two rivers to pollution, the interaction between river-forced, tide-generating, and monsoon-driven water motions in and around the Mailiao industrial zone harbor was examined by performing a series of numerical model experiments. We used a three-dimensional general circulation model to examine the interplay between Asian monsoon-driven, river-forced, and tide-induced water motions, one of which could primarily affect the plume. The model-derived results for different river discharges revealed that almost all of the ammonium entering the harbor had a slope-positive trend, with oscillations in response to flood–ebb tidal cycles. The ammonium increased with time and flux, except for the 10 m3/s flux. Although the river discharge flux exceeded 200 m3/s, the ammonium entering the harbor was the same as that of the 200 m3/s flux; the ammonium concentration did not increase significantly with time after the flux exceeded 200 m3/s. In addition, irrespective of flood or ebb tidal currents being suppressed by strong Asian monsoons, this mechanism avoided contaminating the water quality of the harbor while northeasterly winds prevailed. By contrast, the southwesterly monsoon drove the geostrophic current northward along the coast; concurrently, the coastal sea level increased to form the surface isobar slope up toward the coast, producing a secondary flow to accelerate geostrophic alongshore currents. The northward geostrophic currents compressed the plumes shoreward, forming a relatively narrow-band plume; the coupling model demonstrated that the southwesterly monsoon-driven current pushed plumes favorably along the west pier into the harbor.

Ocean Science ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Chiggiato ◽  
P. Oddo

Abstract. In the framework of the Mediterranean Forecasting System (MFS) project, the performance of regional numerical ocean forecasting systems is assessed by means of model-model and model-data comparison. Three different operational systems considered in this study are: the Adriatic REGional Model (AREG); the Adriatic Regional Ocean Modelling System (AdriaROMS) and the Mediterranean Forecasting System General Circulation Model (MFS-GCM). AREG and AdriaROMS are regional implementations (with some dedicated variations) of POM and ROMS, respectively, while MFS-GCM is an OPA based system. The assessment is done through standard scores. In situ and remote sensing data are used to evaluate the system performance. In particular, a set of CTD measurements collected in the whole western Adriatic during January 2006 and one year of satellite derived sea surface temperature measurements (SST) allow to asses a full three-dimensional picture of the operational forecasting systems quality during January 2006 and to draw some preliminary considerations on the temporal fluctuation of scores estimated on surface quantities between summer 2005 and summer 2006. The regional systems share a negative bias in simulated temperature and salinity. Nonetheless, they outperform the MFS-GCM in the shallowest locations. Results on amplitude and phase errors are improved in areas shallower than 50 m, while degraded in deeper locations, where major models deficiencies are related to vertical mixing overestimation. In a basin-wide overview, the two regional models show differences in the local displacement of errors. In addition, in locations where the regional models are mutually correlated, the aggregated mean squared error was found to be smaller, that is a useful outcome of having several operational systems in the same region.


1998 ◽  
Vol 103 (D20) ◽  
pp. 26025-26039 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Doutriaux-Boucher ◽  
J. Pelon ◽  
V. Trouillet ◽  
G. Sèze ◽  
H. Le Treut ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (16) ◽  
pp. 8749-8761 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Wonsick ◽  
R. T. Pinker ◽  
Y. Ma

Abstract. The "elevated heat pump" (EHP) hypothesis has been a topic of intensive research and controversy. It postulates that aerosol-induced anomalous mid- and upper-tropospheric warming in the Himalayan foothills and above the Tibetan Plateau leads to an early onset and intensification of Asian monsoon rainfall. This finding is primarily based on results from a NASA finite-volume general circulation model run with and without radiative forcing from different types of aerosols. In particular, black carbon emissions from sources in northern India and dust from Western China, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Thar Desert, and the Arabian Peninsula drive the modeled anomalous heating. Since the initial discussion of the EHP hypothesis in 2006, the aerosol–monsoon relationship has been investigated using various modeling and observational techniques. The current study takes a novel observational approach to detect signatures of the "elevated heat pump" effect on convection, precipitation, and temperature for contrasting aerosol content years during the period of 2000–2012. The analysis benefits from unique high-resolution convection information inferred from Meteosat-5 observations as available through 2005. Additional data sources include temperature data from the NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis and the European Reanalysis (ERA-Interim) precipitation data from the Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP), aerosol optical depth from the Multi-angle Imaging Spectroradiometer (MISR) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), and aerosol optical properties from the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA) aerosol reanalysis. Anomalous upper-tropospheric warming and the early onset and intensification of the Indian monsoon were not consistently observed during the years with high loads of absorbing aerosols. Possibly, model assumptions and/or unaccounted semi-direct aerosol effects caused the disagreement between observed and hypothesized behavior.


2013 ◽  
Vol 141 (3) ◽  
pp. 887-899 ◽  
Author(s):  
Urs Schaefer-Rolffs ◽  
Erich Becker

Abstract A dynamic version of Smagorinsky’s diffusion scheme is presented that is applicable for large-eddy simulations (LES) of the atmospheric dynamics. The approach is motivated (i) by the incompatibility of conventional hyperdiffusion schemes with the conservation laws, and (ii) because the conventional Smagorinsky model (which fulfills the conservation laws) does not maintain scale invariance, which is mandatory for a correct simulation of the macroturbulent kinetic energy spectrum. The authors derive a two-dimensional (horizontal) formulation of the dynamic Smagorinsky model (DSM) and present three solutions of the so-called Germano identity: the method of least squares, a solution without invariance of the Smagorinsky parameter, and a tensor-norm solution. The applicability of the tensor-norm approach is confirmed in simulations with the Kühlungsborn mechanistic general circulation model (KMCM). The standard spectral dynamical core of the model facilitates the implementation of the test filter procedure of the DSM. Various energy spectra simulated with the DSM and the conventional Smagorinsky scheme are presented. In particular, the results show that only the DSM allows for a reasonable spectrum at all scales. Latitude–height cross sections of zonal-mean fluid variables are given and show that the DSM preserves the main features of the atmospheric dynamics. The best ratio for the test-filter scale to the resolution scale is found to be 1.33, resulting in dynamically determined Smagorinsky parameters cS from 0.10 to 0.22 in the troposphere. This result is very similar to other values of cS found in previous three-dimensional applications of the DSM.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (7) ◽  
pp. 2558-2575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey Gritsun ◽  
Grant Branstator

Abstract The fluctuation–dissipation theorem (FDT) states that for systems with certain properties it is possible to generate a linear operator that gives the response of the system to weak external forcing simply by using covariances and lag-covariances of fluctuations of the undisturbed system. This paper points out that the theorem can be shown to hold for systems with properties very close to the properties of the earth’s atmosphere. As a test of the theorem’s applicability to the atmosphere, a three-dimensional operator for steady responses to external forcing is constructed for data from an atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM). The response of this operator is then compared to the response of the AGCM for various heating functions. In most cases, the FDT-based operator gives three-dimensional responses that are very similar in structure and amplitude to the corresponding GCM responses. The operator is also able to give accurate estimates for the inverse problem in which one derives the forcing that will produce a given response in the AGCM. In the few cases where the operator is not accurate, it appears that the fact that the operator was constructed in a reduced space is at least partly responsible. As an example of the potential utility of a response operator with the accuracy found here, the FDT-based operator is applied to a problem that is difficult to solve with an AGCM. It is used to generate an influence function that shows how well heating at each point on the globe excites the AGCM’s Northern Hemisphere annular mode (NAM). Most of the regions highlighted by this influence function, including the Arctic and tropical Indian Ocean, are verified by AGCM solutions as being effective locations for stimulating the NAM.


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