An upper‐ocean general circulation model for the north pacific: Preliminary experiments
Open Access
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Atmosphere-Ocean
- Vol. 29 (4) , 737-784
- https://doi.org/10.1080/07055900.1991.9649428
Abstract
A model with two active layers, a mixed layer and a pycnocline layer, over a semipassive deep ocean is described. The model is used to simulate a climatological seasonal cycle in the upper North Pacific. The formulation is similar to that in Cherniawsky et al. (1990). The model resolution is 1° latitude by 1.5° longitude, extending from 62°N to the equator. It is driven with monthly wind stress (Hellerman and Rosenstein, 1983) and with Newtonian heat and freshwater fluxes, which were inferred from climatological (Levitus, 1982) sea‐surface monthly temperatures and annual mean salinities. The monthly temperature anomalies (without the annual mean) are multiplied by a prescribed gain factor and advanced in time, compensating for time delay in the response of the mixed layer. No‐slip and no‐flux constraints are applied on north, east, west and land boundaries, while the following open boundary conditions are used at the equator: (a) free‐slip on zonal velocities in the two layers; (b) a prescribed meridional transport, due to local curl of the wind stress, in the mixed layer; (c) an antisymmetric meridional velocity plus a small flux‐balancing term in the second layer; and (d) across‐equator symmetry for layer depths, temperatures and salinities. Sensitivity to two aspects of parametrization is investigated: (1) the change to horizontal diffusion/viscosity coefficients that depend on the velocity deformation field (as in Smagorinsky, 1963), and (2) the use of idealized piecewise‐linear profiles for second‐layer temperatures and salinities for calculating mixed layer entrainment fluxes.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dynamics of Seasonal and Intraseasonal Variability in the Eastern Equatorial PacificJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1988
- A numerical investigation of the Somali Current during the Southwest MonsoonJournal of Marine Research, 1988
- Wind-Driven Cross-Equatorial Flow in the Pacific OceanJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1988
- Systematic forcing of large-scale geophysical flows by eddy-topography interactionJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1987
- Surface heat fluxes from a numerical weather prediction systemClimate Dynamics, 1987
- Estimation of oceanic eddy transports from satellite altimetryNature, 1986
- Eddy Heat Flux in the Subtropical North PacificJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1986
- On Equatorial Dynamics, Mixed Layer Physics and Sea Surface TemperatureJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1983
- Heat Budget of Tropical Ocean and AtmosphereJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1980
- Numerical Simulation Studies of Oceanic Anomalies in the North Pacific Basin. I: The Ocean Model and the Long-Term Mean StateJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1978