Record Details

A nested grid model of the Oregon Coastal Transition Zone: Simulations and comparisons with observations during the 2001 upwelling season

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title A nested grid model of the Oregon Coastal Transition Zone: Simulations and comparisons with observations during the 2001 upwelling season
Names Springer, S. R. (creator)
Samelson, Roger M. (creator)
Allen, John S. (creator)
Egbert, Gary D. (creator)
Kurapov, Alexander (creator)
Miller, Robert N. (creator)
Kindle, J. C. (creator)
Date Issued 2009-02-13 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract The Oregon Coastal Transition Zone (OCTZ) extends several hundred
kilometers offshore where shelf flows interact with the northern California Current. A
primitive-equation numerical ocean model is used to study the upwelling circulation in this
region from 1 May to 1 November 2001. This OCTZ model obtains initial and boundary
conditions from a larger-scale model of the California Current System and forcing from a
regional atmospheric model product. The model results are compared with extensive in situ
and remotely sensed data, and the model is found to provide a realistic representation of
flows both over the shelf and in the broader OCTZ. Simulation of coastal sea level and
shelf currents over the complex topography of the central Oregon coast is improved
quantitatively relative to previous regional models. A particularly significant qualitative
improvement is realistic representation of coastal jet separation and eddy formation offshore
of Cape Blanco. Three-dimensional Lagrangian analysis of water parcel displacement
shows that the surface waters inshore of the separated jet are upwelled from near the bottom
along the shelf as far north as 45.5°N. A large eddy, which incorporates some of this
upwelled water and carries it farther westward, forms offshore in the late summer. Ensemble
simulations show a distinction between the strongly deterministic response to wind forcing
over the shelf and the more unstable, less predictable jet separation and offshore eddy
formation processes in the region near Cape Blanco.
Genre Article
Identifier Springer, S. R., R. M. Samelson, J. S. Allen, G. D. Egbert, A. L. Kurapov, R. N. Miller, and J. C. Kindle (2009), A nested grid model of the Oregon Coastal Transition Zone: Simulations and comparisons with observations during the 2001 upwelling season, J. Geophys. Res., 114, C02010.

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press