regional ocean model
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2021 ◽  
Vol 893 (1) ◽  
pp. 012077
Author(s):  
Fadhlil R Muhammad ◽  
Imam W Amanullah ◽  
Akhmad Faqih

Abstract To provide weather and climate-related services for disaster management, public policymaking, and adaptation and mitigation efforts, the information regarding climate change is of high importance. However, obtaining or analyzing climate change datasets has been a challenge for those unfamiliar with coding. Therefore, to make the datasets easier to obtain and work with, we develop a "Southeast Asia – Climate-Ocean web App" (SEA-COApp). The SEA-COApp is a web app to aid people in obtaining, analyze, or visualize ROM datasets in Southeast Asia. It can obtain chunks of data from the InaROMS server and visualize it with an intuitive graphical user interface. Furthermore, it also has functionalities to calculate climatology, area average, anomaly, and trends. The tool can help those who are unfamiliar with climate change datasets to be able to use the datasets for their research. Thus, promoting cross-disciplinary research.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prabha Kushwaha ◽  
Vivek Kumar Pandey

Abstract This study attempted to demonstrate the skill of the regional ocean model system (ROMS) is simulating the hydrographic property of the Arabian Sea (AS). Additionally, the impact of horizontal resolution is investigated. In this regard, ROMS is integrated over AS covering [30˚E-80˚E; 5˚N-30N˚] at two different horizontal resolutions 1/6˚(~ 17km) and 1/4˚(~ 25km) for ten years. The comparison of model results with available observation and reanalysis indicates reasonable resemblances in reproducing the spatial-temporal distribution of surface and subsurface hydrographic property i.e. sea surface temperature (SST), sea surface salinity (SSS), sea surface currents, and subsurface temperature and salinity at both resolutions. The increasing resolution shows minimal improvement, indicating the fact that its not always guaranty to enhance the performance towards increasing resolution for every aspect.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tereza Jarníková ◽  
Elise M. Olson ◽  
Susan E. Allen ◽  
Debby Ianson ◽  
Karyn D. Suchy

Abstract. The balance between ocean mixing and stratification influences primary productivity through light limitation and nutrient supply in the euphotic ocean. Here, we apply a hierarchical clustering algorithm (Ward's method) to four factors relating to stratification and depth-integrated phytoplankton biomass extracted from a biophysical regional ocean model of the Salish Sea to assess spatial co-occurrence. Running the clustering algorithm on four years of model output, we identify distinct regions of the model domain that exhibit contrasting wind and freshwater input dynamics, as well as regions of varying watercolumn-averaged vertical eddy diffusivity and halocline depth regimes. The spatial regionalizations in physical variables are similar in all four analyzed years. We also find distinct interannually consistent biological zones. In the Northern Strait of Georgia and Juan de Fuca Strait, a deeper winter halocline and episodic summer mixing coincide with higher summer diatom abundance, while in the Fraser River stratified Central Strait of Georgia, shallower haloclines and stronger summer stratification coincide with summer flagellate abundance. Cluster based model results and evaluation suggest that the Juan de Fuca Strait supports more biomass than previously thought. Our approach elucidates probable physical mechanisms controlling phytoplankton abundance and composition. It also demonstrates a simple, powerful technique for finding structure in large datasets and determining boundaries of biophysical provinces.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 401
Author(s):  
Marcos G. Sotillo ◽  
Francisco Campuzano ◽  
Karen Guihou ◽  
Pablo Lorente ◽  
Estrella Olmedo ◽  
...  

River freshwater contribution in the European Atlantic margin and its influence on the sea salinity field are analyzed. The impacts of using a new river discharge database as part of the freshwater forcing in a regional ocean model are assessed. Ocean model scenarios, based on the CMEMS (Copernicus Marine Environment Monitoring Service) operational IBI-MFC (Iberia Biscay Ireland Monitoring Forecasting Centre) model set-up, are run to test different (observed, modeled and climatological) river and coastal freshwater forcing configurations throughout 2018. The modelled salinity fields are validated, using as a reference all known available in-situ observational data sources. The IBI model application is proven to adequately simulate the regional salinity, and the scenarios showcase the effects of varying imposed river outflows. Some model improvement is achieved using the new forcing (i.e., better capture of salinity variability and more realistic simulation of baroclinic frontal structures linked to coastal and river freshwater buoyancy plumes). Major impacts are identified in areas with bigger river discharges (i.e., the French shelf or the northwestern Iberian coast). Instead, the Portuguese shelf or the Gulf of Cadiz are less impacted by changes in the imposed river inflows, and other dynamical factors in these areas play a major role in the configuration of the regional salinity.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subekti Mujiasih ◽  
Jean-Marie Beckers ◽  
Alexander Barth

<p>Regional Ocean Model System (ROMS) has been simulated for the Sunda Strait, the Java Sea, and the Indian Ocean. The simulation was undertaken for thirteen months of data period (August 2013 – August 2014). However, we only used four months period for validation, namely September – December 2013. The input data involved the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) ocean model output by considering atmospheric forcing from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), without and with tides forcing from TPXO and rivers. The output included vertical profile temperature and salinity, sea surface temperature (SST), seas surface height (SSH), zonal (u), and meridional (v) velocity. We compared the model SST to satellite SST in time series, SSH to tides gauges data in time series, the model u and v component velocity to High Frequency (HF) radial velocity. The vertical profile temperature and salinity were compared to Argo float data and XBT. Besides, we validated the amplitude and phase of the ROMS seas surface height to amplitude and phase of the tides-gauges, including four constituents (M2, S2, K1, O1).</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaël Alory ◽  
Casimir Yélognissè Da-Allada ◽  
Sandrine Djakouré ◽  
Isabelle Dadou ◽  
Julien Jouanno ◽  
...  

Wind-driven coastal upwelling can be compensated by onshore geostrophic flow, and river plumes are associated with such flow. We investigate possible limitation of the northeast Gulf of Guinea upwelling by the Niger River plume, using regional ocean model simulations with or without river and dynamical upwelling indices. Here, the upwelling is weakened by 50% due to an onshore geostrophic flow equally controlled by alongshore thermosteric and halosteric sea-level changes. The river contributes to only 20% of this flow, as its plume is shallow while upwelling affects coastal temperature and salinity over a larger depth. Moreover, the river-induced mixed-layer thinning compensates the current increase, with no net effect on upwelling. The geostrophic compensation is due to an abrupt change in coastline orientation that creates the upwelling cross-shore front. The river nonetheless warms the upwelling tongue by 1°C, probably due to induced changes in horizontal advection and/or stratification.


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