Title of article
Impacts of high resolution model downscaling in coastal regions
Author/Authors
Bricheno، نويسنده , , Lucy M. and Wolf، نويسنده , , Judith M. and Brown، نويسنده , , Jennifer M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
10
From page
7
To page
16
Abstract
The issue of appropriate resolution of coastal models is addressed in this paper. The quality of coastal predictions from three different spatial resolutions of a coastal ocean model is assessed in the context of simulation of the freshwater front in Liverpool Bay. Model performance is examined during the study period February 2008 using a 3-D baroclinic hydrodynamic model. Some characteristic lengthscales and non-dimensional numbers are introduced to describe the coastal plume and freshwater front. Metrics based on these lengthscales and the governing physical processes are used to assess model performance and these metrics have been calculated for the suite of downscaled models and compared with observations.
sed model resolution was found to better capture the position and strength of the freshwater front. However, instabilities along the front such as the tidal excursion led to large temporal and spatial variability in its position in the highest resolution model. By examining the spatial structure of the baroclinic Rossby radius in each model we identify which lengthscales are being resolved at different resolutions. In this dynamic environment it is more valuable to represent the governing time and space scales, rather than relying on strict point by point tests when evaluating model skill.
Keywords
Liverpool Bay , Coastal oceanography , Numerical modelling , river plume , Dynamic downscaling
Journal title
Continental Shelf Research
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Continental Shelf Research
Record number
2298406
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