Ef. Bradley et al., OBSERVATIONS OF NET HEAT-FLUX INTO THE SURFACE MIXED-LAYER OF THE WESTERN EQUATORIAL PACIFIC-OCEAN, J GEO RES-O, 98(C12), 1993, pp. 22521-22532
For a 10-day period during September 1990 the R/V Franklin worked arou
nd a drifting buoy drogued at 20-m depth in the Bismarck Sea near 4-de
grees-S, 149-degrees-E. Continuous measurements were made of the air-s
ea fluxes of radiation and sensible and latent heat, and a conductivit
y/temperature/depth cast to 400 m was made about every 6 hours. The ai
m was to close the heat budget of a sample volume of the surface mixed
layer to within 10 W m-2, in preparation for our participation in the
1992-1993 Tropical Ocean and Global Atmosphere-Coupled Ocean-Atmosphe
re Response Experiment (TOGA-COARE). Temperature and salinity between
the surface and 30-m depth were quite uniform, but below 30 m, variabi
lity was observed which suggested the possible intrusion of horizontal
and vertical advection of heat. Heat content was analyzed for depths
of 40 m and 20 m; bulk Richardson numbers generally greater than 0.8 a
nd 0.4, respectively, in the two cases indicated that diapycnal mixing
through the bottom of the 40-m volume could be neglected at 40 m and
possibly at 20 m (Peters et al., 1988; Godfrey and Lindstrom, 1989). A
n eddy diffusivity for salt at 20 m was obtained to account for the st
eady decrease of observed freshwater content in the top 20 m over that
expected from the surface flux. Using this diffusivity, the turbulent
heat flux through 20 m was of order 6 W m-2, supporting the view that
vertical mixing of heat was small even at this depth. Then, neglectin
g advection and vertical mixing, the heat budget closure to 40-m depth
was satisfied to about 25 W m-2 on average over the period, but both
integrated heat and freshwater time series were ''noisy'' because of v
ariability below 30 m. Limited to 20-m depth, the average difference b
etween incident energy and heat content was reduced to about 12 W m-2,
with close agreement over the diurnal cycle. The model for air-sea ex
change of sensible and latent heat by Liu et al. (1979) is verified at
low wind speeds, although it may overestimate slightly for winds over
the range 3-6 m s-1. This study has identified several possible sourc
es of measurement, parameterization, and sampling error in determining
the net heat flux into the ocean; however, with good sampling for the
advective components, errors in heat budgets should be within the 10
W m-2 accuracy aimed for during COARE.