T. Kikuchi et al., A numerical investigation of the transport process of dense shelf water from a continental shelf to a slope, J GEO RES-O, 104(C1), 1999, pp. 1197-1210
We investigate the offshore transport process of dense shelf water, using a
three-dimensional, primitive equation model. We focus on the effects of bo
ttom topography, in particular, inclination of a bottom slope from a contin
ental shelf to a deep basin. For the numerical domain we use an idealized b
ottom topography in which the bottom deepens gradually from a shallow conti
nental shelf region to a steep slope region. In the continental shelf regio
n we use a salt flux which represents the typical brine rejection in a coas
tal polynya. Results of the numerical experiments show that dense shelf wat
er is transported offshore by eddy flux and a dense plume. The transport by
eddy flux occurs mainly over a continental shelf, while that by the dense
plume occurs over a continental slope. A boundary between the regions where
the above two processes are dominant corresponds locally to a shelf break.
A salinity front is developed in the boundary over the shelf break, separa
ting the dense shelf water from the offshore water. We also investigate the
stability of the surface westward current over the shelf break front, usin
g a simple analytical model. The analytical model investigation shows that
shelf break topography plays an important role in determining a neutral poi
nt of the stability of the shelf break current and preventing dense shelf w
ater from being transported farther offshore by eddy flux. We suggest that
eddy activity on a continental shelf contributes not only to the developmen
t of the shelf break front but also to the water exchange between a contine
ntal shelf and a slope region.