Belcher, S. E., Grant, A. L. M., Hanley, K. E. and Sullivan, P. P. (2009) Surface wave processes in air-sea interaction. In: ECMWF Workshop on Ocean-Atmosphere Interactions, 10-12 November 2008, Reading, pp. 75-82.
Abstract/Summary
We review briefly recent progress on understanding the role of surface waves on the marine atmospheric boundary layer and the ocean mixed layer and give a global perspective on these processes by analysing ERA-40 data. Ocean surface waves interact with the marine atmospheric boundary layer in two broad regimes: (i) the conventional wind-driven wave regime, when fast winds blow over slower moving waves, and (ii) a wave-driven wind regime when long wavelength swell propagates under low winds, and generates a wave-driven jet in the lower part of the marine boundary layer. Analysis of ERA-40 data indicates that the wave-driven wind regime is as prevalent as the conventional wind-driven regime. Ocean surface waves also change profoundly mixing in the ocean mixed layer through generation of Langmuir circulation. Results from large-eddy simulation are used here to develop a scaling for the resulting Langmuir turbulence, which is a necessary step in developing a parametrization of the process. ERA-40 data is then used to show that the Langmuir regime is the predominant regime over much of the global ocean, providing a compelling motivation for parameterising this process in ocean general circulation models.
Item Type | Conference or Workshop Item (Paper) |
URI | https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/1972 |
Item Type | Conference or Workshop Item |
Refereed | No |
Divisions | Science > School of Mathematical, Physical and Computational Sciences > Department of Meteorology |
Publisher | European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts |
Download/View statistics | View download statistics for this item |
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