TY - JOUR
T1 - The Benguela upwelling system
T2 - Quantifying the sensitivity to resolution and coastal wind representation in a global climate model
AU - Justin Small, R.
AU - Curchitser, Enrique
AU - Hedstrom, Katherine
AU - Kauffman, Brian
AU - Large, William G.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Of all the major coastal upwelling systems in the world's oceans, the Benguela, located offsouthwest Africa, is the one that climate models find hardest to simulate well. This paper investigates the sensitivity of upwelling processes, and of sea surface temperature (SST), in this region to resolution of the climate model and to the offshore wind structure. The Community Climate System Model (version 4) is used here, together with the Regional Ocean Modeling System. The main result is that a realistic wind stress curl at the eastern boundary, and a high-resolution ocean model, are required to well simulate the Benguela upwelling system. When the wind stress curl is too broad (as with a 1° atmosphere model or coarser), a Sverdrup balance prevails at the eastern boundary, implying southward ocean transport extending as far as 30°S and warm advection. Higher atmosphere resolution, up to 0.5°, does bring the atmospheric jet closer to the coast, but there can be too strong a wind stress curl. The most realistic representation of the upwelling system is found by adjusting the 0.5° atmosphere model wind structure near the coast toward observations, while using an eddy-resolving ocean model. A similar adjustment applied to a 1° ocean model did not show such improvement. Finally, the remote equatorial Atlantic response to restoring SST in a broad region offshore of Benguela is substantial; however, there is not a large response to correcting SST in the narrow coastal upwelling zone alone.
AB - Of all the major coastal upwelling systems in the world's oceans, the Benguela, located offsouthwest Africa, is the one that climate models find hardest to simulate well. This paper investigates the sensitivity of upwelling processes, and of sea surface temperature (SST), in this region to resolution of the climate model and to the offshore wind structure. The Community Climate System Model (version 4) is used here, together with the Regional Ocean Modeling System. The main result is that a realistic wind stress curl at the eastern boundary, and a high-resolution ocean model, are required to well simulate the Benguela upwelling system. When the wind stress curl is too broad (as with a 1° atmosphere model or coarser), a Sverdrup balance prevails at the eastern boundary, implying southward ocean transport extending as far as 30°S and warm advection. Higher atmosphere resolution, up to 0.5°, does bring the atmospheric jet closer to the coast, but there can be too strong a wind stress curl. The most realistic representation of the upwelling system is found by adjusting the 0.5° atmosphere model wind structure near the coast toward observations, while using an eddy-resolving ocean model. A similar adjustment applied to a 1° ocean model did not show such improvement. Finally, the remote equatorial Atlantic response to restoring SST in a broad region offshore of Benguela is substantial; however, there is not a large response to correcting SST in the narrow coastal upwelling zone alone.
KW - Atm/Ocean Structure/Phenomena
KW - Atmosphere-ocean interaction
KW - Circulation/Dynamics
KW - Coupled models
KW - Models and modeling
KW - Ocean models
KW - Regional models
KW - Sea surface temperature
KW - Upwelling/downwelling
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84950121560
U2 - 10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0192.1
DO - 10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0192.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84950121560
SN - 0894-8755
VL - 28
SP - 9409
EP - 9432
JO - Journal of Climate
JF - Journal of Climate
IS - 23
ER -