Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islands

The oceanic circulation around the Hawaiian archipelago is characterized by a complex circulation and the presence of mesoscale eddies west of the islands. These eddies typically develop and persist for weeks to several months in the area during persistent trade winds conditions. A series of numeric...

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Main Authors: M. Kersalé, A. M. Doglioli, A. A. Petrenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2011-05-01
Series:Ocean Science
Online Access:http://www.ocean-sci.net/7/277/2011/os-7-277-2011.pdf
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spelling doaj-c9bb4bc896444c85ab314d5e5d602b2a2020-11-25T01:01:33ZengCopernicus PublicationsOcean Science1812-07841812-07922011-05-017327729110.5194/os-7-277-2011Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islandsM. KersaléA. M. DoglioliA. A. PetrenkoThe oceanic circulation around the Hawaiian archipelago is characterized by a complex circulation and the presence of mesoscale eddies west of the islands. These eddies typically develop and persist for weeks to several months in the area during persistent trade winds conditions. A series of numerical simulations on the Hawaiian region has been done in order to examine the relative importance of wind, inflow current and topographic forcing on the general circulation and the generation of eddies. Moreover, numerical cyclonic eddies are compared with the one observed during the cruise E-FLUX (Dickey et al., 2008). Our study demonstrates the need for all three forcings (wind, inflow current and topography) to reproduce the known oceanic circulation. In particular, the cumulative effect plays a key role on the generation of mesoscale eddies. The wind-stress-curl, via the Ekman pumping mechanism, has also been identified as an important mechanism upon the strength of the upwelling in the lee of the Big Island of Hawaii. In order to find the best setup of a regional ocean model, we compare more precisely numerical results obtained using two different wind databases: COADS and QuikSCAT. The main features of the ocean circulation in the area are well reproduced by our model forced by both COADS and QuickSCAT climatologies. Nevertheless, significant differences appear in the levels of kinetic energy and vorticity. The wind-forcing spatial resolution clearly affects the way in which the wind momentum feeds the mesoscale phenomena. The higher the resolution, the more realistic the ocean circulation. In particular, the simulation forced by QuikSCAT wind data reproduces well the observed energetic mesoscale structures and their hydrological characteristics and behaviors.http://www.ocean-sci.net/7/277/2011/os-7-277-2011.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Kersalé
A. M. Doglioli
A. A. Petrenko
spellingShingle M. Kersalé
A. M. Doglioli
A. A. Petrenko
Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islands
Ocean Science
author_facet M. Kersalé
A. M. Doglioli
A. A. Petrenko
author_sort M. Kersalé
title Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islands
title_short Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islands
title_full Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islands
title_fullStr Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islands
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of Hawaii islands
title_sort sensitivity study of the generation of mesoscale eddies in a numerical model of hawaii islands
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Ocean Science
issn 1812-0784
1812-0792
publishDate 2011-05-01
description The oceanic circulation around the Hawaiian archipelago is characterized by a complex circulation and the presence of mesoscale eddies west of the islands. These eddies typically develop and persist for weeks to several months in the area during persistent trade winds conditions. A series of numerical simulations on the Hawaiian region has been done in order to examine the relative importance of wind, inflow current and topographic forcing on the general circulation and the generation of eddies. Moreover, numerical cyclonic eddies are compared with the one observed during the cruise E-FLUX (Dickey et al., 2008). Our study demonstrates the need for all three forcings (wind, inflow current and topography) to reproduce the known oceanic circulation. In particular, the cumulative effect plays a key role on the generation of mesoscale eddies. The wind-stress-curl, via the Ekman pumping mechanism, has also been identified as an important mechanism upon the strength of the upwelling in the lee of the Big Island of Hawaii. In order to find the best setup of a regional ocean model, we compare more precisely numerical results obtained using two different wind databases: COADS and QuikSCAT. The main features of the ocean circulation in the area are well reproduced by our model forced by both COADS and QuickSCAT climatologies. Nevertheless, significant differences appear in the levels of kinetic energy and vorticity. The wind-forcing spatial resolution clearly affects the way in which the wind momentum feeds the mesoscale phenomena. The higher the resolution, the more realistic the ocean circulation. In particular, the simulation forced by QuikSCAT wind data reproduces well the observed energetic mesoscale structures and their hydrological characteristics and behaviors.
url http://www.ocean-sci.net/7/277/2011/os-7-277-2011.pdf
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