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Read Full Article (file size: 1694047 bytes) Cited by
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 109,
C12022,
doi:10.1029/2003JC002133,
2004
Spring-summer frontogenesis at the mouth of Block Island Sound: 2. Combining acoustic Doppler current profiler records with
a general circulation model to investigate the impact of subtidal forcing
C. A. Edwards
Ocean Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, California, USA
T. A. Fake
Department of Marine Sciences, University of Connecticut, Groton, Connecticut, USA
D. L. Codiga
Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Naragansett, Rhode Island, USA
P. S. Bogden
Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System, Portland, Maine, USA
Abstract
The use of a one-layer inverse model to improve the fidelity of a three-dimensional primitive equation model is explored in
the region just south of Block Island Sound in the Middle Atlantic Bight. The inverse model, based on the theory of Bennett
and McIntosh, produces a solution to the linear, shallow-water equations that minimizes model-data misfit and the resulting
open boundary velocity variance. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology general circulation model is configured regionally
and includes realistic tidal forcing, surface warming, and wind stress, as well as climatological buoyancy gradients between
the estuary and the shelf. A 15 day record from two acoustic Doppler current profiler moorings, deployed in spring 2000 south
of the entrance of Block Island Sound, allows assessment of the forward model and provides data to improve subtidal boundary
conditions. Model-data misfit decreases notably for both the depth-averaged and vertically sheared flow, indicating that improvements
to the depth-averaged circulation positively impact the three-dimensional circulation in this shallow shelf environment. The
role of wind stress in modulating the position of the buoyant plume that characterizes the regional hydrography is also examined.
A distinctly three-dimensional circulation is observed, with a growing offshore plume at the mouth of the sound during northward
stress followed by rapid alongshelf advection during periods of southwestward or weak winds. Although, on the timescales considered
here, wind stress forcing dominates the buoyancy-driven motion, it is overwhelmed by the tidally driven rectified flow just
south of Montauk Point, which provides the inshore boundary of the front even in downwelling favorable conditions.
Received 19
September
2003;
accepted 9
February
2004;
published 15
December
2004.
Keywords: fronts;
data assimilation.
Index Terms: 4528 Oceanography: Physical: Fronts and jets; 4235 Oceanography: General: Estuarine processes; 4546 Oceanography: Physical: Nearshore processes; 4255 Oceanography: General: Numerical modeling; 4219 Oceanography: General: Continental shelf processes.
Read Full Article (file size: 1694047 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Edwards, C. A., T. A. Fake, D. L. Codiga, and P. S. Bogden
(2004),
Spring-summer frontogenesis at the mouth of Block Island Sound: 2. Combining acoustic Doppler current profiler records with
a general circulation model to investigate the impact of subtidal forcing,
J. Geophys. Res.,
109,
C12022,
doi:10.1029/2003JC002133.
Copyright 2004 by the American Geophysical Union.
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