Back to Search Start Over

Dynamical Analysis of the Boundary Layer and Surface Wind Responses to Mesoscale SST Perturbations

Authors :
NAVAL RESEARCH LAB MONTEREY CA MARINE METEOROLOGY DIV
O'Neill, Larry W.
Esbensen, Steven K.
Thum, Nicolai
Samelson, Roger M.
Chelton, Dudley D.
NAVAL RESEARCH LAB MONTEREY CA MARINE METEOROLOGY DIV
O'Neill, Larry W.
Esbensen, Steven K.
Thum, Nicolai
Samelson, Roger M.
Chelton, Dudley D.
Source :
DTIC
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The dynamical response of the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) to mesoscale sea surface temperature (SST) perturbations is investigated over the Agulhas Return Current during winter from a 1-month, high-resolution, three-dimensional simulation using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) mesoscale model. A steady lower boundary condition for July 2002 is obtained using SST measurements from the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer on the Earth Observing System (EOS)-Aqua satellite (AMSR-E). The WRF models' ability to accurately simulate the SST-induced surface wind response is demonstrated from a comparison with satellite surface wind observations from the SeaWinds scatterometer on the Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) satellite. Relevant features of this simulation include a quasi periodic distribution of mesoscale SST perturbations with spatial scales ;200 km and strong winds that lead to a large surface sensible heat flux response, whose broad range of 80-100 W m22 between warm and cool SST perturbations is much larger than seen in most previous simulations of mesoscale wind-SST coupling. This simulation provides the first realistic example of vertical turbulent redistribution of momentum driven by the SST-induced surface heating perturbations acting in concert with the SST-induced pressure gradients to accelerate near-surface flow toward warm water and decelerate near-surface flow toward cool water. This simulation is also the first example of a near-surface wind speed response to mesoscale SST perturbations that differs qualitatively and substantially from the vertically averaged MABL wind response. In the vertically averaged MABL momentum budget, the surface wind stress acts as a drag on the SST-induced perturbation flow as it is being accelerated by SST-induced pressure gradients. However, only in the middle and upper reaches of the MABL does the turbulent stress divergence act as a drag on the SST-induced winds perturbations in this simulation.<br />Published in the Climate Journal v23 i3 p559-p581, February 2010.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
DTIC
Notes :
text/html, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn832070768
Document Type :
Electronic Resource