The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity

The Amazon and the Orinoco river plumes modulate ocean stratification and colour in the tropical North Atlantic. This changes air-sea interactions and may thus be important for tropical cyclones (TCs). Using a regional ocean model, the potential impact of the rivers on ocean temperatures, stability,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Newinger, Christina
Other Authors: Toumi, Ralf, Natural Environment Research Council (Great Britain), European Commission
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Imperial College London 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/25272
https://doi.org/10.25560/25272
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spelling ftimperialcol:oai:spiral.imperial.ac.uk:10044/1/25272 2023-05-15T17:36:23+02:00 The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity Newinger, Christina Toumi, Ralf Natural Environment Research Council (Great Britain) European Commission 2015-07 http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/25272 https://doi.org/10.25560/25272 unknown Imperial College London Physics Thesis or dissertation Doctoral Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) 2015 ftimperialcol https://doi.org/10.25560/25272 2019-11-14T23:38:41Z The Amazon and the Orinoco river plumes modulate ocean stratification and colour in the tropical North Atlantic. This changes air-sea interactions and may thus be important for tropical cyclones (TCs). Using a regional ocean model, the potential impact of the rivers on ocean temperatures, stability, and TC intensity is investigated. The influence of riverine freshwater on the ocean is twofold: Firstly the freshwater plume stabilizes the water column, and secondly ocean colour in the plume modifies solar transmission. Within the Amazon and Orinoco plume, the two mechanisms have opposing and effective cancelling effects on TCs. On the one hand the freshwater plume thickens the barrier layer by up to 15 m locally, leading to increased stability and temperature inversions. The cooling inhibition index (CI) is +2.2 (J/m2) 1/3 larger when the river freshwater is present, potentially reducing SST feedbacks. Surface temperatures and upper ocean heat content are only slightly modified by the rivers. Ocean colour in the freshwater plume on the other hand, blocks the deeper ocean from sunlight, leading to moderate surface warming (+0.1o C) and substantial sub- surface cooling (-0.3o C 100m mean temperature). As a consequence cold water is more readily available to passing storms and the CI decreases by -2.1 (J/m2) 1/3 , hence increasing negative SST feedbacks. The net effect of the coloured plume on SST cooling is thus negligible. Simple, idealized relationships between expected surface cooling and TC intensity, suggest that the river-induced barrier layer enhances strong TCs by up to -5 to -12 hPa, while ocean colour may reduce intensity of strong storms by +8 hPa to +16 hPa. The net impact of the coloured plume is negligible for weak storms and a slight intensity reduction for stronger cyclones. Within the Amazon and Orinoco plume, the river freshwater effect may thus be substantially reduced or even offset by light absorbing particles. Open Access Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis North Atlantic Imperial College London: Spiral
institution Open Polar
collection Imperial College London: Spiral
op_collection_id ftimperialcol
language unknown
description The Amazon and the Orinoco river plumes modulate ocean stratification and colour in the tropical North Atlantic. This changes air-sea interactions and may thus be important for tropical cyclones (TCs). Using a regional ocean model, the potential impact of the rivers on ocean temperatures, stability, and TC intensity is investigated. The influence of riverine freshwater on the ocean is twofold: Firstly the freshwater plume stabilizes the water column, and secondly ocean colour in the plume modifies solar transmission. Within the Amazon and Orinoco plume, the two mechanisms have opposing and effective cancelling effects on TCs. On the one hand the freshwater plume thickens the barrier layer by up to 15 m locally, leading to increased stability and temperature inversions. The cooling inhibition index (CI) is +2.2 (J/m2) 1/3 larger when the river freshwater is present, potentially reducing SST feedbacks. Surface temperatures and upper ocean heat content are only slightly modified by the rivers. Ocean colour in the freshwater plume on the other hand, blocks the deeper ocean from sunlight, leading to moderate surface warming (+0.1o C) and substantial sub- surface cooling (-0.3o C 100m mean temperature). As a consequence cold water is more readily available to passing storms and the CI decreases by -2.1 (J/m2) 1/3 , hence increasing negative SST feedbacks. The net effect of the coloured plume on SST cooling is thus negligible. Simple, idealized relationships between expected surface cooling and TC intensity, suggest that the river-induced barrier layer enhances strong TCs by up to -5 to -12 hPa, while ocean colour may reduce intensity of strong storms by +8 hPa to +16 hPa. The net impact of the coloured plume is negligible for weak storms and a slight intensity reduction for stronger cyclones. Within the Amazon and Orinoco plume, the river freshwater effect may thus be substantially reduced or even offset by light absorbing particles. Open Access
author2 Toumi, Ralf
Natural Environment Research Council (Great Britain)
European Commission
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Newinger, Christina
spellingShingle Newinger, Christina
The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity
author_facet Newinger, Christina
author_sort Newinger, Christina
title The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity
title_short The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity
title_full The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity
title_fullStr The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity
title_full_unstemmed The barrier layer and ocean colour in the Amazon and Orinoco plume: Competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity
title_sort barrier layer and ocean colour in the amazon and orinoco plume: competing for the oceanic control on tropical cyclone intensity
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/25272
https://doi.org/10.25560/25272
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25560/25272
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