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By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr....

Date post: 18-Jan-2018
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What is WHWP and why do we want to study it? Importance of WHWP:  A heating source for the summer Atlantic Hadley circulation (Wang and Enfield, 2003)  A source of moisture for North America, affecting summer rainfall in the US, Caribbean, Central & South America (Bosilovich et al. 2002; Mestas-Nunez et al., 2005)  Important for Atlantic Hurricanes (Wang et al., 2005)  Interannual variability large, a part of ENSO- Atlantic bridge signal
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By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly used surface heat flux data sets in driving HYCOM simulation of WHWP (2)To assure that the model will optimally simulate the warm pool behavior (i.e, fine- tuning). (3)To understand the annual cycle of the WHWP heat budget (i.e, forcing and damping mechanisms) OGCM sensitivity experiments on the annual cycle of Western Hemisphere Warm Pool (WHWP)
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Page 1: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM)

Objectives: (1) To assess the appropriateness of commonly used surface

heat flux data sets in driving HYCOM simulation of WHWP

(2) To assure that the model will optimally simulate the warm pool behavior (i.e, fine-tuning).

(3) To understand the annual cycle of the WHWP heat budget (i.e, forcing and damping mechanisms)

OGCM sensitivity experiments on the annual cycle of Western Hemisphere Warm Pool

(WHWP)

Page 2: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Outline What is WHWP and why do we want to study it? HYCOM configuration 16 Numerical experiments Two important numerical issues

(a) Heat budget analysis using HYCOM? (b) Synoptic variability of surface turbulent heat flux

Model-Data and Model-Model comparisons Conclusion and Discussion

Page 3: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

What is WHWP and why do we want to study it?

Importance of WHWP: A heating source for the summer Atlantic Hadley circulation (Wang and Enfield, 2003) A source of moisture for North America, affecting summer rainfall in the US, Caribbean, Central & South America (Bosilovich et al. 2002; Mestas-Nunez et al., 2005) Important for Atlantic Hurricanes (Wang et al., 2005) Interannual variability large, a part of ENSO-Atlantic bridge signal

Page 4: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

OGCM simulationModel: Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (version 2.1.27)Model domain: contains both Pacific and Atlantic (100oE- 20oE, 35oS-65oN) Resolution: uniform 1o in zonally and variable in meridional direction; 0.5o at the equator increasing linearly to 1o at 40o latitude and 1o poleward of 40o; 22 hybrid layersMiscs.: T-S are advected; Levitus climatology used for initial condition, also for relaxation at the southern boundary.

Page 5: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Numerical experiments

Page 6: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Two important numerical issuesIssue-1: Heat budget analysis using HYCOM? Hybrid grid generator acts like an upstream vertical advection operator (Bleck, 2002), contributing in ocean heat budget A practical solution is to enforce the surface layers (~50m) to be in purely z-coordinate (the problem still exist in hybrid layers, but not in purely z-coordinate or isopycnal layers). Use unrealistically small target density for the upper layers to enforce the surface layers (~50m) to be in purely z-coordinate (Bleck, 2002) PCM scheme do nothing in z-coordinate layers, but PLM (HYCOM default) still operate in purely z-coordinate layers. Heat budget computation routine is implemented in the codes. Using archive data is not a good idea.

Page 7: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Issue-1: Heat budget analysis using HYCOM?C n u ity .f H yb gen .f

T 1o ld

T 2o ld

T 1ne w

T 2ne w

P C M (p iecewise co n sta n t m eth od )

T 1ne w = (T 1

o ld(H 1-h ) + T 2o ldh ) / H 1

T 2ne w = T 2

o ld

P L M (p iecew ise lin ea r m eth o d )

T 1ne w = (T 1

o ld(H 1 -h ) + T 2o ldh ) / H 1 +

T 2ne w = T 2

o ld-H 1 /H 2

hH 1

H 2

Page 8: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Issue-2: Synoptic variability of surface turbulent heat flux

Page 9: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Issue-2: Synoptic variability of surface turbulent heat flux

Synoptic variability in the surface turbulent heat fluxes (anisotropic heat flux term) is significant over the WHWP (~50W/m2).Anisotropic heat flux is independent from the mean fluxes, thus can not be parameterized (Gulev, 1979). When monthly heat flux data sets are used to force HYCOM, anisotropic heat flux must be treated separately. A practical way is to estimate the anisotropic heat flux for each surface heat flux climatology, then use it as an additional heat flux in HYCOM.

Page 10: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Surface net heat flux in the eight data sets

Page 11: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Air-sea heat (moisture) transfer coefficeint

Page 12: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Quick evaluation of the eight flux datasets (EPIC)

Page 13: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Quick evaluation of the eight flux datasets (PIRATA)

Page 14: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

SHC-KPP & OBH-KPP

Page 15: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

SHU-KPP & DSU-KPP

Page 16: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

NCEP1-KPP & NCEP2-KPP

Page 17: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

ERA15-KPP & ERA40-KPP

Page 18: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Model SST bias versus surface net heat flux (QNET)

Page 19: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

QNET (DSU – ERA15)

Page 20: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Simulated vs. observed subsurface temperature profile

Page 21: By S.-K. Lee (CIMAS/UM), D. Enfield (AOML/NOAA), C. Wang (AOML/NOAA), and G. Halliwell Jr. (RSMAS/UM) Objectives: (1)To assess the appropriateness of commonly.

Summary The simulated SST is closest to the observations when Southampton constrained (SHC) data is used to force HYCOM; unrealistically high when forced with unconstrained in-situ data products (SHU, DSU) and unrealistically low when forced with model-based reanalysis products (NCEP1, NCEP2, ERA15 and ERA40). The model SST bias is minimized when monthly KPAR climatology is used. For reasonable variations of the critical Richarson number (0.25 ~ 1.00) in two different mixing models (KPP and GISS), there is no significant impact on the results. Heat flux bias is too high to make any conclusion. Yes, HYCOM can be used for mixed layer heat budget studies, but the numerical diffusion due to hybrid-grid generator must be properly dealt with, and the heat budget computation routine must be implemented in the codes. When monthly heat flux data sets are used to force HYCOM, synoptic variability of the QLAT and QSEN must be incorporated in HYCOM.


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