Numerical Modeling of Tides in Hudson Bay

A two-dimensional numerical model is developed to study the cooscillating and independent tides in Hudson Bay. Using centered differences (forward differences for the dissipative term) and conjugate Richardson lattices, the Laplace Tidal Equations in spherical polar coordinates are integrated in tim...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada
Main Authors: Freeman, N. G., Murty, T. S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1976
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f76-282
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/f76-282
Description
Summary:A two-dimensional numerical model is developed to study the cooscillating and independent tides in Hudson Bay. Using centered differences (forward differences for the dissipative term) and conjugate Richardson lattices, the Laplace Tidal Equations in spherical polar coordinates are integrated in time until cyclic equilibrium is reached. For the cooscillating tide, the direct tidal forcing term is set to zero, and the observed tidal constituent is specified at the mouth of Hudson Bay. Separate runs are made for M 2 , S 2 , N 2 , and K 1 . For the independent tide, the closed mouth boundary condition of zero water transport is imposed, and the model run for the M 2 and K 1 direct tidal forcing. A number of experiments are carried out to test the sensitivity of the model to uncertainties in the input data and parameterization of some of the terms. It is shown that the tidal propagation is relatively insensitive to friction coefficient and island schematization, but very sensitive to depth representation in the Belcher Islands area and phase variation in the specified boundary conditions.Comparison of the results with previous work and shore-based gauge observations gives good amplitude and phase agreement for the M 2 , S 2 , and N 2 cooscillating tidal constituents except in the vicinity of the degenerate amphidromic points in James Bay and the Belcher Islands where the amplitudes are very small. The amplitudes of the K 1 independent tide, unlike the M 2 , are found to be upwards of 30% of the K 1 cooscillating tide. The M 2 cooscillating tidal currents, when compared with current meter results at two stations across the mouth of James Bay, show good agreement in west–east decrease in amplitude, reversal of direction of rotation, and increase in rotary character, but generally tended to underestimate the absolute magnitude of these single depth measurements. Overall, the model gives good qualitative agreement with shore-based data and can be used to interpret tidal propagation in the Hudson–James Bay system.