www.nonlin-processes-geophys.net/11/3/2004/ © Author(s) 2004. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Lagrangian characteristics of continental shelf flows forced by periodic wind stress College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State Univ., 104 Ocean Admin. Bldg., Corvallis, OR, 97 331, USA Abstract. The coastal ocean may experience periods of fluctuating along-shelf wind direction, causing shifts between upwelling and downwelling conditions with responses that are not symmetric. We seek to understand these asymmetries and their implications on the Eulerian and Lagrangian flows. We use a two-dimensional (variations across-shelf and with depth; uniformity along-shelf) primitive equation numerical model to study shelf flows in the presence of periodic, zero-mean wind stress forcing. The model bathymetry and initial stratification is typical of the broad, shallow shelf off Duck, NC during summer. After an initial transient adjustment, the response of the Eulerian fields is nearly periodic. Despite the symmetric wind stress forcing, there exist both mean Eulerian and Lagrangian flows. The mean Lagrangian displacement of parcels on the shelf depends both on their initial location and on the initial phase of the forcing. Eulerian mean velocities, in contrast, have almost no dependence on initial phase. In an experiment with sinusoidal wind stress forcing of maximum amplitude 0.1Nm Full Article (PDF, 2256 KB) Citation: Kuebel Cervantes, B. T., Allen, J. S., and Samelson, R. M.: Lagrangian characteristics of continental shelf flows forced by periodic wind stress, Nonlin. Processes Geophys., 11, 3-16, 2004. Bibtex EndNote Reference Manager |
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