Artículos de revistas
Modeling the Brazil ?Malvinas Confluence: Model Configuration
Fecha
2002-10Registro en:
Palma, Elbio Daniel; Matano, Ricardo; Piola, Alberto Ricardo; Modeling the Brazil ?Malvinas Confluence: Model Configuration; Asociación Argentina de Mecánica Computacional; Mecánica Computacional; XXI; 5; 10-2002; 443-461
2591-3522
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Palma, Elbio Daniel
Matano, Ricardo
Piola, Alberto Ricardo
Resumen
The upper ocean circulation near the western margin of the South Atlantic Ocean is dominated by the southward flow of the warm and salty Brazil Current and the northward flow of the cold and relatively fresh Malvinas Current. The collision, near 38 o S, of the two jets produces a strong frontal zone known as the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence (BMC). The BMC is populated with eddies and meanders and is known to be one of the most energetic areas of the world oceans (Chelton et al) [1] . In this article we describe the numerical strategies used to implement a regional, eddy resolving, three-dimensional numerical model of the BMC. The numerical experiments consisted of integrations using idealized set-ups and experiments with a realistic basin configuration. The experiments in idealized basins were used to test the numerical implementation of open boundary conditions in a dynamical setting that includes both passive and active lateral boundaries. The simulations in a realistic basin ere forced with climatological wind stress and heat fluxes at the surface and mass and heat fluxes extracted from global simulations across the lateral boundaries. The numerical results so obtained appear to reproduce the general features observed in hydrographic and remote sensed data, including the observed mean position of the BMC and volume transports of the boundary currents, and the development of warm intrusion eddies.