Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction

A three-dimensional primitive equation model including sea ice thermodynamics and air-sea interaction is used to study seasonal circulation and water mass variability in the Caspian Sea under the influence of realistic mass, momentum and heat fluxes. River discharges, precipitation, radiation and wi...

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Main Authors: R. A. Ibrayev, E. Özsoy, C. Schrum, H. İ. Sur
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-03-01
Series:Ocean Science
Online Access:http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/311/2010/os-6-311-2010.pdf
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spelling doaj-ec2d6431d26f43d8af010cfbda6ee2582020-11-25T00:16:16ZengCopernicus PublicationsOcean Science1812-07841812-07922010-03-0161311329Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interactionR. A. IbrayevE. ÖzsoyC. SchrumH. İ. SurA three-dimensional primitive equation model including sea ice thermodynamics and air-sea interaction is used to study seasonal circulation and water mass variability in the Caspian Sea under the influence of realistic mass, momentum and heat fluxes. River discharges, precipitation, radiation and wind stress are seasonally specified in the model, based on available data sets. The evaporation rate, sensible and latent heat fluxes at the sea surface are computed interactively through an atmospheric boundary layer sub-model, using the ECMWF-ERA15 re-analysis atmospheric data and model generated sea surface temperature. The model successfully simulates sea-level changes and baroclinic circulation/mixing features with forcing specified for a selected year. The results suggest that the seasonal cycle of wind stress is crucial in producing basin circulation. Seasonal cycle of sea surface currents presents three types: cyclonic gyres in December–January; Eckman south-, south-westward drift in February–July embedded by western and eastern southward coastal currents and transition type in August–November. Western and eastern northward sub-surface coastal currents being a result of coastal local dynamics at the same time play an important role in meridional redistribution of water masses. An important part of the work is the simulation of sea surface topography, yielding verifiable results in terms of sea level. The model successfully reproduces sea level variability for four coastal points, where the observed data are available. Analyses of heat and water budgets confirm climatologic estimates of heat and moisture fluxes at the sea surface. Experiments performed with variations in external forcing suggest a sensitive response of the circulation and the water budget to atmospheric and river forcing. http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/311/2010/os-6-311-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. A. Ibrayev
E. Özsoy
C. Schrum
H. İ. Sur
spellingShingle R. A. Ibrayev
E. Özsoy
C. Schrum
H. İ. Sur
Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction
Ocean Science
author_facet R. A. Ibrayev
E. Özsoy
C. Schrum
H. İ. Sur
author_sort R. A. Ibrayev
title Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction
title_short Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction
title_full Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction
title_fullStr Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal variability of the Caspian Sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction
title_sort seasonal variability of the caspian sea three-dimensional circulation, sea level and air-sea interaction
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Ocean Science
issn 1812-0784
1812-0792
publishDate 2010-03-01
description A three-dimensional primitive equation model including sea ice thermodynamics and air-sea interaction is used to study seasonal circulation and water mass variability in the Caspian Sea under the influence of realistic mass, momentum and heat fluxes. River discharges, precipitation, radiation and wind stress are seasonally specified in the model, based on available data sets. The evaporation rate, sensible and latent heat fluxes at the sea surface are computed interactively through an atmospheric boundary layer sub-model, using the ECMWF-ERA15 re-analysis atmospheric data and model generated sea surface temperature. The model successfully simulates sea-level changes and baroclinic circulation/mixing features with forcing specified for a selected year. The results suggest that the seasonal cycle of wind stress is crucial in producing basin circulation. Seasonal cycle of sea surface currents presents three types: cyclonic gyres in December–January; Eckman south-, south-westward drift in February–July embedded by western and eastern southward coastal currents and transition type in August–November. Western and eastern northward sub-surface coastal currents being a result of coastal local dynamics at the same time play an important role in meridional redistribution of water masses. An important part of the work is the simulation of sea surface topography, yielding verifiable results in terms of sea level. The model successfully reproduces sea level variability for four coastal points, where the observed data are available. Analyses of heat and water budgets confirm climatologic estimates of heat and moisture fluxes at the sea surface. Experiments performed with variations in external forcing suggest a sensitive response of the circulation and the water budget to atmospheric and river forcing.
url http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/311/2010/os-6-311-2010.pdf
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