Heating of the Midshelf and Inner Shelf by Warm Internal Tidal Bores

Abstract

Cross-shore heat flux (CHF) spatiotemporal variability in the subtidal (ST), diurnal (DU), and semidiurnal (SD) bands is described for 35 days (summer 2015) from collocated vertical measures of temperature and currents obtained by moorings deployed from 50- to 7-m water depths near Pt. Sal, California. The CHF is largest in the ST and SD bands, with nearly zero contribution in the DU band. The sum of CHF and surface heat flux (SHF) account for 31% and 17% of the total change in heat storage on the midshelf and inner shelf, respectively. The ST CHF for the midshelf and inner shelf is mostly negative and is correlated with upwelling-favorable winds. A mostly positive SD CHF on the midshelf and inner shelf decreases linearly in the shoreward direction, is correlated with wind relaxations, and is attributed to warm-water internal tidal bores (WITBs) that are observed to propagate to the edge of the surf zone. A negative SD CHF is correlated with upwelling-favorable winds on the midshelf at 15–25-h time lags, and is believed to be associated with cold-water internal tidal bores. The WITBs have characteristics of progressive waves on the midshelf and transition to partially standing waves on the inner shelf potentially reducing the SD CHF contribution on the inner shelf. Heat accumulation over the midshelf and inner shelf is primarily driven by WITBs and SHF, which is largely balanced by cumulative cooling by ST processes over the midshelf and cumulative cooling by alongshore heat flux (AHF) over the inner shelf.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2020
Source ID
10.1175/jpo-d-19-0143.1

Entities

People

  • Ata Suanda
  • Jamie MacMahan
  • John A. Colosi
  • Matt K. Gough
  • Nirnimesh Kumar
  • T. M. Freismuth

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School
  • Office of Naval Research
  • University of Otago
  • University of Washington

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Coastal Oceanography
  • Combustion and Flow Dynamics.