adele-morrison / easterlies-collaborative-project

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Velocity anomalies #7

Closed wghuneke closed 3 years ago

wghuneke commented 3 years ago
wghuneke commented 3 years ago

Updated version! (Previously the easterlies UP case was calculated wrong.) Fig_ASC_map_easterlies_pert

wghuneke commented 3 years ago

Things to note:

adele-morrison commented 3 years ago

Wilma is the top plot here the same as your Fig 2b in your paper? It's a little hard to tell due to the different projections, but they look quite different to me. The figure above seems to show the coastal current as having much stronger velocities than the ASC, whereas your paper figure (pasted here) shows the opposite. Could it be the shorter averaging period here perhaps?

Screen Shot 2021-07-08 at 3 57 39 pm
wghuneke commented 3 years ago

Interesting point. For the plot in the paper I used 10 years (2080-2089) whereas in the plot for this project I used 5 years (2160-2164). I plotted the difference on a circumpolar projection for comparison below. There are some differences in the Weddell Sea (weaker in the east, stronger in the west) and in the Amundsen Sea (weaker eastward current). But I'm not sure if the coastal current is stronger/weaker. The model does have a strong coastal current in East Antarctica.

Screenshot_ASC_21602164_20802089

wghuneke commented 3 years ago

I also plotted the along-slope velocity along the 1000m isobath so we can see the change in the depth structure.

Fig_ASC_1000m_contour_easterlies_pert

adele-morrison commented 3 years ago

Great thanks for checking that - must have just been my eyes deceiving me thinking that the earlier 10 year period had a much stronger ASC.

In the 1000m isobath figure above, the increase/decrease perturbation anomalies look fairly symmetrical, is that right? But not in the map view at the top. Is that because the map view highlights the shelf changes (which are asymmetrical) more than the slope changes (which are symmetrical)?

I don't understand the sign of the changes here either. Even West Antarctica seems inconsistent with the wind changes - stronger easterlies which oppose the westward flowing current there result in a stronger westward flowing current. I guess there is a feedback which overwhelms the Ekman-driven heaving of the isopcynals against the coast (as shown here) that we haven't identified yet.

Maybe one way to start trying to understand the dynamics here is to look at cross-slope transects of velocities / isopycnals / temp / salt.

StephenGriffies commented 3 years ago

How do you define along-slope velocity? Are you just projecting u into along and across the local direction of the topography slope? I guess this definition becomes a bit noisy when there is only a weak slope, as on the shelf. Is that correct?

wghuneke commented 3 years ago

Yes, I project onto the local topographic slope. I'm mostly interested in the ASC (which where the slope is large) and usually ignore the areas on the shelf / further offshore.

wghuneke commented 3 years ago

Vertical average of the upper 500 m (data along the 1000 m isobath), anomaly for each perturbation from the control run. Seems to be a symmetric response in most regions after all. Fig_ASC_1000m_contour_easterlies_pert_upper500m

wghuneke commented 3 years ago

Here are the plots for year 1 (along 1000 m isobath) in comparison to the above plots which are an average over years 10-15.

Fig_ASC_1000m_contour_easterlies_pert_year1

Fig_ASC_1000m_contour_easterlies_pert_upper500m_year1