A High-Resolution Three-Dimensional Hydrodynamic Tidal Model of the Eastern Irish Sea
Open Access
- 1 February 1993
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Physical Oceanography
- Vol. 23 (2) , 207-224
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0485(1993)023<0207:ahrtdh>2.0.co;2
Abstract
A high-resolution (0.5′ north-south by 1.0′ west-east, approximately a 1-km grid) hydrodynamic tidal model of the eastern Irish Sea is used to examine the sensitivity of M2 tidal currents to changes in open boundary data and bottom drag coefficients. The model uses a finite-difference grid formulation in the horizontal, with an expansion technique in the vertical, giving a continuous current profile from sea surface to sea bed. A slip boundary condition is applied at the sea bed. Eddy viscosity in the model is a function of the flow field. Comparison of observed and computed tidal elevation and currents show good agreement, although in general, currents are slightly higher than observed. The effect on tidal current profile of changes in bottom friction coefficient is found to be influenced by the proximity of the open boundary to the region of interest. This suggests, and calculations confirm, that it is not just the local coefficient of bottom friction (i.e., that within the eastern Irish Sea) t... Abstract A high-resolution (0.5′ north-south by 1.0′ west-east, approximately a 1-km grid) hydrodynamic tidal model of the eastern Irish Sea is used to examine the sensitivity of M2 tidal currents to changes in open boundary data and bottom drag coefficients. The model uses a finite-difference grid formulation in the horizontal, with an expansion technique in the vertical, giving a continuous current profile from sea surface to sea bed. A slip boundary condition is applied at the sea bed. Eddy viscosity in the model is a function of the flow field. Comparison of observed and computed tidal elevation and currents show good agreement, although in general, currents are slightly higher than observed. The effect on tidal current profile of changes in bottom friction coefficient is found to be influenced by the proximity of the open boundary to the region of interest. This suggests, and calculations confirm, that it is not just the local coefficient of bottom friction (i.e., that within the eastern Irish Sea) t...Keywords
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