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A modeling study of shelf circulation off northern California in the region of the Coastal Ocean Dynamics Experiment : response to relaxation of upwelling winds

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Title A modeling study of shelf circulation off northern California in the region of the Coastal Ocean Dynamics Experiment : response to relaxation of upwelling winds
Names Gan, Jianping (creator)
Allen, John S. (creator)
Date Issued 2002-09-17 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract A two-part modeling study of the wind-forced flow on the continental shelf off
northern California in the region (37°–40°N) of the Coastal Ocean Dynamics Experiment
(CODE) is pursued. This paper involves a process-oriented study with idealized wind
stress forcing. Gan and Allen [2002] involves forcing with observed winds and heat flux
for April–May 1982 and comparison of model results with CODE observations. A
characteristic, but previously unexplained, response observed during CODE following the
weakening, or relaxation, of southward upwelling favorable winds is the time-dependent
development of northward currents over the inner shelf next to the coast. The presence of
northward winds is not necessary for this occurrence. The objective in this paper is to
investigate the dynamics of the shelf flow response to upwelling wind relaxation events
under idealized conditions. In the basic case experiment a spatially uniform upwelling
favorable southward wind stress of 0.1 Pa is applied to the ocean initially at rest. The
stress is held constant for 10 days and then decreased linearly to zero over 3 days. In
response to the southward wind stress, southward alongshore currents develop on the shelf
accompanied by upwelling of cold, dense water near the coast. Considerable spatial
variability in the shelf flow, clearly related to the alongshore variations in coastline and
bottom topography, is found. The alongshore currents tend to separate from the coast
south of capes, and the coldest surface water is found at those locations. As the winds
decrease, northward currents, similar to those observed, develop on the inner shelf next to
the coast at many alongshore locations. Examination of the alongshore momentum
balances shows that the northward currents are forced by a northward pressure gradient
force associated with negative alongshore pressure gradients. These pressure gradients are
set up by the interaction of the wind-forced flow with the alongshore variations in shelf
topography. In general, negative alongshore pressure gradients, intensified off Pt. Reyes
and Pt. Arena by the gradient wind balance, are found south of capes. The negative
pressure gradients geostrophically balance onshore flow at depth, and upwelling is
strengthened in these locations. North of capes, positive pressure gradients that are
primarily in balance with nonlinear advective effects are found. After the winds cease the
forced across-shelf circulation weakens, and the resulting unbalanced negative pressure
gradients south of the capes accelerate the alongshore currents northward. Processes with
similar dynamics are found embedded in the more complex coastal ocean response to
observed time varying winds by Gan and Allen [2002].
Genre Article
Topic upwelling
Identifier Gan, J., and Allen J. S., (2002). A modeling study of shelf circulation off northern California in the region of the Coastal Ocean Dynamics Experiment : response to relaxation of upwelling winds, J. Geophys. Res., 107, C9, 3123.

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