Jw. Bao et al., Numerical simulations of air-sea interaction under high wind conditions using a coupled model: A study of hurricane development, M WEATH REV, 128(7), 2000, pp. 2190-2210
In this study, a coupled atmosphere-ocean wave modeling system is used to s
imulate air-sea interaction under high wind conditions. This coupled modeli
ng system is made of three well-tested model components: The Pennsylvania S
tate University-National Center for Atmospheric Research regional atmospher
ic Mesoscale Model, the University of Colorado version of the Princeton Oce
an Model, and the ocean surface gravity wave model developed by the Wave Mo
del Development and Implementation Group. The ocean model is initialized us
ing a 9-month spinup simulation forced by 6-hourly wind stresses and with a
ssimilation of satellite sea surface temperature (SST) and altimetric data
into the model. The wave model is initialized using a zero wave state. The
scenario in which the study is carried out is the intensification of a simu
lated hurricane passing over the Gulf of Mexico. The focus of the study is
to evaluate the impact of sea spray, mixing in the upper ocean, warm-core o
ceanic eddies shed by the Gulf Loop Current, and the sea surface wave field
on hurricane development, especially the intensity.
The results from the experiments with and without sea spray show that the i
nclusion of sea spray evaporation can significantly increase hurricane inte
nsity in a coupled air-sea model when the part of the spray that evaporates
is only a small fraction of the total spray mass. In this case the heat re
quired for spray evaporation comes from the ocean. When the fraction of sea
spray that evaporates increases, so that the evaporation extracts heat fro
m the atmosphere and cools the lower atmospheric boundary layer, the impact
of sea spray evaporation on increasing hurricane intensity diminishes.
It is shown that the development of the simulated hurricane is dependent on
the location and size of a warm-core anticyclonic eddy shed by the Loop Cu
rrent The eddy affects the timing, rate, and duration of hurricane intensif
ication. This dependence occurs in part due to changes in the translation s
peed of the hurricane, with a stower-moving hurricane being more sensitive
to a warm-core eddy. The feedback from the SST change in the wake of the si
mulated hurricane is negative so that a reduction of SST results in a weake
r-simulated hurricane than that produced when SST is held unchanged during
the simulation. The degree of surface cooling is strongly dependent on the
initial oceanic mixed layer (OML) depth. It is also found in this study tha
t in order to obtain a realistic thermodynamic state of the upper ocean and
not distort the evolution of the OML structure during data assimilation, c
are must be taken in the data assimilation procedure so as not to interfere
with the turbulent dynamics of the OML.
Compared with the sensitivity to the initial OML depth and the location and
intensity of the warm eddy associated with the loop current, the model is
found to be less sensitive to the wave-age-dependent roughness length.