Modeling deep convection in the Greenland Sea

The development of deep convective events in the high-latitude ocean is studied using a three-dimensional, coupled ice-ocean model. Oceanic mixing is described according to the level 2.5 turbulence closure scheme in which convection occurs in a continuous way, i.e., convective adjustment is not invo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hakkinen, S., Mellor, G. L., Kantha, L. H.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1992
Subjects:
48
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19920051544
Description
Summary:The development of deep convective events in the high-latitude ocean is studied using a three-dimensional, coupled ice-ocean model. Oceanic mixing is described according to the level 2.5 turbulence closure scheme in which convection occurs in a continuous way, i.e., convective adjustment is not invoked. The model is forced by strong winds and surface cooling. Strong upwelling at the multilyear ice edge and consequent entrainment of warm Atlantic waters into the mixed layer is produced by winds parallel to the ice edge. Concomitant cooling drives deep convection and produces chimneylike structures. Inclusion of a barotropic mean flow over topography to the model provides important preconditioning and selects the location of deep convection. The most efficient preconditioning occurs at locations where the flow ascends a slope. In a stratified environment similar to the Greenland Sea with a 12 m/s wind the model simulations show that localized deep convection takes place after about 10 days to depths of 1000 m.