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Tidal currents on the central Oregon shelf : models, data, and assimilation

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Field Value
Title Tidal currents on the central Oregon shelf : models, data, and assimilation
Names Erofeeva, Svetlana Y. (creator)
Egbert, Gary D. (creator)
Kosro, P. Michael, 1951- (creator)
Date Issued 2003 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract Measurements of tidal currents on the central Oregon shelf are available from several
sources, including recent high frequency (HF) coastal radar and Acoustic Doppler
Profiler (ADP) deployments, and historical current moorings. In this paper we use a
generalized inverse (GI) approach to compare these data to, and then assimilate them into,
numerical models for the barotropic tides. Harmonic analysis of the data in short time
windows using a modified admittance approach reveals that tidal currents on the Oregon
shelf are highly variable in time, and can contain significant baroclinic components. Data
from the winter months, when waters on the shelf are only weakly stratified, are found
to be most nearly barotropic and thus most reasonable for assimilation into the shallow
water equations model. The various data sources are used in several different
combinations for assimilation and validation. Forcing the prior forward model with
normal flow open boundary conditions obtained from a regional barotropic inverse
model results in semidiurnal barotropic currents that are consistent (within estimated
error limits) with all available data. In contrast, diurnal currents on the shelf are very
sensitive to details of the model configuration, and are significantly improved by data
assimilation. Very similar solutions result from assimilation of either the HF radar or
ADP data sets. The high sensitivity of the diurnal band currents can be understood
dynamically in terms of trapped shelf waves. A short (~85 km long) section of shelf off
the central Oregon coast is wide enough to allow first-mode barotropic shelf waves at
the subinertial diurnal frequencies. This results in locally resonant large amplitude
diurnal tidal currents that are very sensitive to details in the local forcing, and hence
quite variable in time.
Genre Article
Identifier Erofeeva, S. Y., G. D. Egbert, and P. M. Kosro, Tidal currents on the central Oregon shelf: Models, data, and assimilation, J. Geophys. Res., 108(C5), 3148, 2003.

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