WHOI PO
César Sauvage, WHOI, "Impacts of surface waves on air-sea flux and marine boundary layer processes"
| Date |
Time |
Location |
| May 2nd, 2023 |
3:05pm-4:05pm |
Clark 507 |
Oceanic and surface wave processes, through air-sea interaction, are
critical for the atmosphere and an accurate description of the surface
wind stress. This study aims to evaluate the impacts of waves by
comparing parameterized wind stress via COARE 3.5 bulk flux algorithm in
a fully coupled wave-ocean-atmosphere model. Sensitivity experiments are
conducted using two different wave roughness parameterizations within
COARE, including one that relies solely on wind speed only assuming
wind-wave equilibrium, and another that uses spatially varying wave age
and wave slope. These results are compared against directly measured
wind stress, notably at the NSF OOI Pioneering Arrays mooring in the US
East Coast region and shipboard measurements gathered during the
ATOMIC/EUREC4A field campaign in the Northwest Tropical Atlantic Ocean.
We found that, for sea states dominated by mature waves uncorrelated
with local winds of moderate to strong intensity (i.e., mixed sea), the
COARE wave-based formulation predicts significantly lower roughness
length and surface stress, resulting in an instantaneous increase of the
near-surface wind speed above the constant flux layer. Further
investigation indicates that the impact of swell on roughness element is
over-emphasized in the current version of the COARE wave-based
formulations, especially for mixed sea states with moderate to strong
winds. We suggest various remedies to mitigate the deficiencies in COARE
by incorporating the missing physics, such as the misaligned wave on the
surface drag, and using a sea-state parameter that more robustly
characterizes the mixed seas, such as spectrally-averaged wave phase
speed rather than the peak wave speed that is currently used in the
algorithm. The results of these sensitivity experiments against
available observations will be discussed.