Title: Oral exam
1- Oral exam
- Upwelling in SAB
Alfredo Lopez de Aretxabaleta 30-Jul-2004
2Outline
- Definition of upwelling
- Different mechanisms for coastal upwelling
- Wind-driven coastal upwelling
- Western Boundary Currents upwelling
- other
- Upwelling in SAB
- Summer wind-driven upwelling
- Upwelling associated with Gulf Stream meanders
- Connection between two processes
- Upwelling in SAB in 2003
- Wind forcing
- Strength, proximity and meander activity of G-S
- Stratification (preconditioning)
- Upstream effects
3Working Definition
- The vertical advection of nutrient-rich
subsurface waters of lower temperature and
greater density into upper layers of the ocean.
4- Different mechanisms for coastal upwelling
- Wind-driven coastal upwelling
- Locally forced (Ekman)
- Remotely forced (Kevin and shelf waves)
- Western Boundary Currents
- (baroclinic instability ? meanders, filaments,
frontal eddies) - Topographic (canyons, shelf edge)
5Wind-driven Upwelling mechanisms
Equatorial Upwelling
6Wind-driven upwelling East versus West
- Wind pattern
- (extent, intensity, persistency)
- Width depth of shelf
- Depth of thermocline
- Stratification
- Presence of Western Boundary Current
- Differences between east and west coast
biological provinces
NASA/GSF
Savidge et al, 1992
Martins Pelegri, submitted
7Coastal Wind-driven Upwelling
8Surface Ekman Layer
Cushman-Roisin, Fig 5-4
9Surface Ekman Layer Upwelling
The upwelling velocity is proportional to the
curl of the wind stress
10Ekman Transport
- The replacement of water is confined to coastal
zone and the offshore scale is given by the
baroclinic radius of deformation - The resulting cross-shelf Ekman transport
(confined to surface Ekman layer) - And cross-shelf velocity
11Remotely forced wind-driven upwelling
Response to elevation change is not purely local.
Raised thermocline (or low elevation) might
propagate disturbances equatorward (polarward) in
EC (WC). The dynamics are the same as in normal
upwelling, but propagation happens as a Kelvin
wave.
12Remotely forced wind-driven upwelling
13Western Boundary Current Upwelling
Bane, 1994
14Western Boundary Current Upwelling
- As a parcel of fluid gets to shallower areas it
squeezes and to conserve potential vorticity it
gains anticyclonic spin - As the parcel of water moves to deeper areas, it
stretches and therefore gains cyclonic rotation - Several factors (e.g., divergence of isobaths,
displacement of isopycnals) might cause growth on
the meanders
15Western Boundary Current Upwelling
Ito et al, 1995
16Western Boundary Current Upwelling
Cushman-Roisin, Fig 16-1
17Vorticity Balance
18Western Boundary Current Upwelling
Osgood et al, 1987
19Topographically induced upwelling
- Examples of several mechanisms
- Narrowing of continental shelf accelerating
along-shelf flow through narrowing section -
- Upwelling along continental slope induced by
change in turbulence from shelf to slope under
onshore wind conditions (Heaps, 1980) - Upwelling in bottom boundary layer in stratified
flow over sloping bottom - Flow over
- coastal canyon
t
20Upwelling in SAB
21SAB
22SAB bathymetry
Phil Weinbach, http//oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/
23Gulf Stream structure
24Gulf Stream structure
25SAB processes
http//www.skio.peachnet.edu/
26SAB processes
FRED experiment, 1989
27Gulf Stream meanders
Brooks Bane, 1983
28Outer shelf characteristics
20-22 April 1979
Yoder et al, 1981
29Turbulent Fluxes
Lee et al, 1991
30Turbulent Fluxes
Lee et al, 1991
31Gulf Stream structure
Table 2 from Miller Lee, 1995
Vertical Velocity W lt0.2 cm
s-1 Along-shelf Rossby number Rv 0.08 Cross-shelf
Rossby number Ru 1.1 Planetary beta parameter
ßp 2 10-13 cm-1 s-1 Topographic beta
parameter ßt 3 10-11 cm-1 s-1 Relative
vorticity ?V/Lz 7 10-5 s-1
Parameter
Value
32Gulf Stream energetics
DKF EPW BTC EEC
Dewar Bane, 1989
33Turbulent Fluxes
Eddy decay region ? onshore transport
Eddy growth region ? offshore transport
Lee et al, 1991
34NO3 Flux
35Winter-spring NO3 Flux
Lee et al, 1991
36Summer wind conditions
Blanton et al, 2003
37Summer SAB upwelling
38Ekman Transport for SAB
- The replacement of water is confined to coastal
zone and the offshore scale is given by the
baroclinic radius of deformation - The resulting cross-shelf Ekman transport
(confined to surface Ekman layer) - And cross-shelf velocity
39Summer NO3 Flux
Lee et al, 1991
40Fall NO3 Flux
Lee et al, 1991
41SAB nitrate flux and production
Lee et al, 1991 Menzel, ed, 1993
Total production Total SAB 35 1012gC
yr-1 Inner shelf 620gC m-2yr-1 Mid
shelf 248gC m-2yr-1 Outer shelf 360gC
m-2yr-1 Potential new production Nitrate
input 78gN m-2yr-1 Potential new production 7.4
1012gC yr-1 Realized new production 4.3 1012gC
yr-1
Primary production rates
Value
42GABEX II (1981)
Bottom Temperature and Currents
Atkinson et al, 1987
43GABEX II (1981)
Atkinson et al, 1987
44GABEX II (1981)
Atkinson et al, 1987
451981 Modes of variability
Variance explained 37.4 16.0 13.5
Proximity of G-S
Frontal eddy activity
Local wind effect
Hamilton, 1987
46GABEX II (1981)
St Augustine section
NO3 is nitrate calculated from temperature
Atkinson et al, 1987
47SAB volume of cold water
- Transport of cold water onshore
v
Volume of water on mid and outer shelf (from DoE
report)
Time needed to fill out lower part of mid and
outer shelf
48Upwelling in SAB during summer 2003
49Upwelling in SAB during summer 2003
Shivering in the Surf Atlantic's Sudden
Temperature Dive A Midsummer Mystery for
Scientists By John F. KellyWashington Post
Staff WriterThursday, August 7, 2003
http//www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A25865-20
03Aug6?languageprinter
50Region
- Main inputs of water
- river discharge
- interaction with Gulf Stream through meanders
and filaments - exchange with the Mid Atlantic Bight through the
Cape Hatteras region.
Bane et al., 2001
51SAB 2003
Szekielda, 2004
52SST anomaly July 2003
MODIS, NASA Earth Observatory
53Wind temporal variability
Mean along-shelf wind statistical test comparison
for Buoy 41008 (Grays Reef)
Signif. greater
Prev. years
2003
No
0.42
-0.01
Apr
Yes
0.66
1.42
May
Yes
1.20
3.47
Jun
Yes
2.51
3.83
Jul
Yes
0.92
2.31
Aug
No
-1.52
-3.29
Sep
54Wind persistence
55Wind anomaly spatial variability
56Rainfall
57May Salinity
58June Temperature
59August Temperature
60August Density
612004 Temperature
26 July 2004
Jim Nelson
62T-S characteristics
63Origin of upwelled water
where a is the thermal expansion, ß is the saline
contraction, TGS is the Gulf Stream temperature
and Tj is the observed temperature
64Origin of upwelled water
remote origin
local origin
65Origin of upwelled water
No barrier
warm barrier
66Sea Level
15-20 cm lower than clim. Values During Aug?
Weisberg Liu, pers. comm.
67Gulf Stream transport
Adapted from Baringer Larsen, 2001
68Lower Mean Sea Level
Increased Transport Increased Cross-stream
Slope LOWER Coastal Sea level
69Higher Mean Sea Level
Decreased Transport Decreased Cross-stream
Slope HIGHER Coastal Sea level
70Modeling results
Barotropic clim wind Vs Barotropic 2003 wind
71Modeling results
Barotropic reduced mixing
72Stratification
maxN20.01s-1
73Stratification 1981
74Stratification effect
Low stratification
High stratification
- Strong velocity shear (even reversed flow ?)
- Wind forcing controls upper layer processes
- Lower layer controlled by pressure forcing
- Some velocity shear
- Wind forcing controls mid and inner shelf
processes
75Summer 03 dynamics
X
X
X
X
X
X
76Position of G-S
Noble Gelfenbaum (1992) found no correlation
between G-S position and coastal water level, but
what is the effect on frontal eddies and
upwelling (Hamilton, 1987) ?
Olson et al, 1983
77Position of G-S
Savidge et al, 1992
782003 Data limitations
Hydrographic observations
Atmospheric observations
SST, SSH
QuickScat
SAV cruises
Towers
Cable ?? Calibrat. cruises
792003 Remaining questions
- Gulf Stream effects
- Gulf Stream position
- Look at SSH and SST
- Meander activity anomalous
- Modeling activities
- Relative importance of different forcings
- Anomalous wind alone
- Effect of river discharge and increased
stratification in spring - Effect of Gulf Stream
- Estimate volume of anomalous water on the shelf
- Effects on circulation and biological
implications
802003 Conclusions
- Anomalous upwelling favorable winds (strength and
persistence) were a principal driver of the event - Increased river discharge could have
preconditioned the shelf through late spring
salinity stratification that by early summer
became thermal stratification. - The cold water upwelled onto the shelf and the
deep Gulf Stream water presented similar
characteristics suggesting that the anomalous
water came from the deep part of the Stream. - Further analysis of observations and model
simulations are needed to quantify the effect of
the different forcing mechanisms.
81Acknowledgements
- Funding
- SEACOOS (ONR)
- SABLAM (NOPP)
- People
- -My committee Cisco Werner, Harvey Seim, John
Bane, Jim Nelson, Rick Luettich, Jose Luis
Pelegri. - -Brian Blanton, Karen Edwards, Bob Weisberg,
Chris Meinen, Ed Kearns
82Additional slides
An indicator of relative importance of the
barotropic and baroclinic instabilities is the
ratio of the total available potential energy
(TAPE) to the total kinetic energy (TKE) i. e. b
TAPE/TKE Luther and Bane, 1985. The TAPE and
TKE are given by
where D is the volume
of the flow field and lt gt is the mean density
bgtgt1 for predominantly baroclinic flow, while
bltlt1 for predominantly barotropic flow.
83Climatology
Bottom temperature and salinity
Blanton et al, 2003
84Climatology
T, S, Rho transects at 32N
Blanton et al, 2003
85Climatology
Velocity solutions (wind mass- field forced)
Blanton et al, 2003
86Connectivity
87Additional slides
88Governing equations
Momentum
Continuity
89Governing equations
Momentum
Continuity
90Governing equations
2-D Continuity
91Governing equations