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Author Branger Karine, Drillet Yann, Houssais Marie-Nolle, Testor Pierre, Bourdall-Badie Romain, Alhammoud Bahjat, Bozec Alexandra, Mortier Laurent, Bouruet-Aubertot Pascale, Crpon Michel, doi  openurl
  Title Impact of the spatial distribution of the atmospheric forcing on water mass formation in the Mediterranean Sea Type Journal Article
  Year (down) 2010 Publication J. Geophys. Res. Abbreviated Journal J. Geophys. Res.  
  Volume 115 Issue C12 Pages C12041 -  
  Keywords Mediterranean Sea, deep water formation, numerical modeling, atmospheric forcing, 4504 Oceanography: Physical: Air/sea interactions, 4215 Oceanography: General: Climate and interannual variability, 4513 Oceanography: Physical: Decadal ocean variability, 4283 Oceanography: General: Water masses, 4520 Oceanography: Physical: Eddies and mesoscale processes,  
  Abstract The impact of the atmospheric forcing on the winter ocean convection in the Mediterranean Sea was studied with a high-resolution ocean general circulation model. The major areas of focus are the Levantine basin, the Aegean-Cretan Sea, the Adriatic Sea, and the Gulf of Lion. Two companion simulations differing by the horizontal resolution of the atmospheric forcing were compared. The first simulation (MED16-ERA40) was forced by air-sea fields from ERA40, which is the ECMWF reanalysis. The second simulation (MED16-ECMWF) was forced by the ECMWF-analyzed surface fields that have a horizontal resolution twice as high as those of ERA40. The analysis of the standard deviations of the atmospheric fields shows that increasing the resolution of the atmospheric forcing leads in all regions to a better channeling of the winds by mountains and to the generation of atmospheric mesoscale patterns. Comparing the companion ocean simulation results with available observations in the Adriatic Sea and in the Gulf of Lion shows that MED16-ECMWF is more realistic than MED16-ERA40. In the eastern Mediterranean, although deep water formation occurs in the two experiments, the depth reached by the convection is deeper in MED16-ECMWF. In the Gulf of Lion, deep water formation occurs only in MED16-ECMWF. This larger sensitivity of the western Mediterranean convection to the forcing resolution is investigated by running a set of sensitivity experiments to analyze the impact of different time-space resolutions of the forcing on the intense winter convection event in winter 1998–1999. The sensitivity to the forcing appears to be mainly related to the effect of wind channeling by the land orography, which can only be reproduced in atmospheric models of sufficient resolution. Thus, well-positioned patterns of enhanced wind stress and ocean surface heat loss are able to maintain a vigorous gyre circulation favoring efficient preconditioning of the area at the beginning of winter and to drive realistic buoyancy loss and mixing responsible for strong convection at the end of winter.
 
  Programme 452  
  Campaign  
  Address  
  Corporate Author Thesis Bachelor's thesis  
  Publisher AGU Place of Publication Editor  
  Language Summary Language Original Title  
  Series Editor Series Title Abbreviated Series Title  
  Series Volume Series Issue Edition  
  ISSN 0148-0227 ISBN Medium  
  Area Expedition Conference  
  Notes Approved yes  
  Call Number Serial 2693  
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