An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphere

The ocean heat exchange process is a key mechanism in climate variations over a broad time – scale. In this study, the long–term mean surface heat fluxes over the Persian Gulf have been estimated by the empirical relations using data derived from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA...

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Main Authors: A. Rezaei-Latifi, F. Hosseinibalam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2015-07-01
Series:Journal of Radiation Research and Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1687850715000205
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spelling doaj-9d63d36c292e4816a8e34a1865bb6d342020-11-25T01:52:33ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Radiation Research and Applied Sciences1687-85072015-07-018335436110.1016/j.jrras.2015.02.002An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphereA. Rezaei-Latifi0F. Hosseinibalam1Physics Department, Faculty of Sciences, Hormozgan University, Hormozgan, Bandar Abbas, IranPhysics Department, Faculty of Sciences, University of Isfahan, Isfahan, IranThe ocean heat exchange process is a key mechanism in climate variations over a broad time – scale. In this study, the long–term mean surface heat fluxes over the Persian Gulf have been estimated by the empirical relations using data derived from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The basin-averaged annual mean values of heat transfer due to solar radiation, sensible heat flux, long-wave radiation flux and latent fluxes are about 219,−14, −75 and −136, respectively. Therefore, the long – term annual mean net heat flux is about −6 W m−2 (negative sign means upward heat flux) and shows a very good agreement with the direct measured advective value through the Hormuz Strait. The spatial distribution of the surface heat fluxes, which has not been investigated before, show relatively large spatial variation in latent heat flux. The annual mean net heat flux spatial distribution varies from about −30 to 10 W m−2, with greatest heat loss in southeastern and northwestern regions of the Gulf. In mid – winter (January), the northern region along the Iranian coast loses heat (about 20–80 W m−2) but southern and northwestern shallow regions gain heat (about 15 W m−2) from the atmosphere. In mid-summer (July) the spatial variation in net heat flux is weak and is positive at most all over the Gulf.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1687850715000205Turbulent fluxesLongwave radiationAtmospherePersian Gulf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Rezaei-Latifi
F. Hosseinibalam
spellingShingle A. Rezaei-Latifi
F. Hosseinibalam
An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphere
Journal of Radiation Research and Applied Sciences
Turbulent fluxes
Longwave radiation
Atmosphere
Persian Gulf
author_facet A. Rezaei-Latifi
F. Hosseinibalam
author_sort A. Rezaei-Latifi
title An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphere
title_short An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphere
title_full An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphere
title_fullStr An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphere
title_full_unstemmed An estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the Persian Gulf with the overlying atmosphere
title_sort estimate of the surface heat fluxes transfer of the persian gulf with the overlying atmosphere
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Radiation Research and Applied Sciences
issn 1687-8507
publishDate 2015-07-01
description The ocean heat exchange process is a key mechanism in climate variations over a broad time – scale. In this study, the long–term mean surface heat fluxes over the Persian Gulf have been estimated by the empirical relations using data derived from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The basin-averaged annual mean values of heat transfer due to solar radiation, sensible heat flux, long-wave radiation flux and latent fluxes are about 219,−14, −75 and −136, respectively. Therefore, the long – term annual mean net heat flux is about −6 W m−2 (negative sign means upward heat flux) and shows a very good agreement with the direct measured advective value through the Hormuz Strait. The spatial distribution of the surface heat fluxes, which has not been investigated before, show relatively large spatial variation in latent heat flux. The annual mean net heat flux spatial distribution varies from about −30 to 10 W m−2, with greatest heat loss in southeastern and northwestern regions of the Gulf. In mid – winter (January), the northern region along the Iranian coast loses heat (about 20–80 W m−2) but southern and northwestern shallow regions gain heat (about 15 W m−2) from the atmosphere. In mid-summer (July) the spatial variation in net heat flux is weak and is positive at most all over the Gulf.
topic Turbulent fluxes
Longwave radiation
Atmosphere
Persian Gulf
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1687850715000205
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