Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4548023 Journal of Marine Systems 2014 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The response of the buoyant plume to the wind and tide is numerically investigated.•The relative role of wind and tide is evaluated through mechanical energy analysis.•Wind/tide is dominant for the variability of the plume in the shelf/estuary region.•Tide enables the middle part of the wide estuary to serve dynamically as an entrance.•Plume is less sensitive to the change of wind and tide in the estuary than over the shelf.

A numerical simulation of the buoyant river plume over the Pearl River Estuary (PRE) and adjacent shelf during a typical upwelling favorable wind period of the summer monsoon is utilized to explore the responses of the plume to wind and tide forcing. The model is forced with time-dependent river discharge, wind and tide, and it shows reasonable ability to capture the basic structure and responses of the plume. Additional numerical experiments that are forced without either wind or tide are used to evaluate the relative importance of wind and tide in generating plume variability. Results show that the vertical structure of the plume and the strength of the stratification in the estuary are determined by the combination of the buoyancy forcing associated with river discharge and tidal forcing, and vary with the advection process, while the horizontal shape and spreading of the plume over the shelf are highly influenced by the wind-driven coastal current, and are more susceptible to the change of vertical mixing. Mechanical energy analysis in each dynamical region (upper, middle, lower estuary, and shelf) reveals that this is because the system mainly gains energy from tide (wind) in the estuary (shelf), and loses energy to the bottom friction (internal-shear mixing) in the estuary (shelf). The largest forcing and dissipation terms in the middle PRE, and at the entrances of smaller estuaries such as Huang Mao Hai, are due to tidal forcing, which enables the middle PRE to serve dynamically as the entrance of an estuary, where the transition of the river plume into coastal buoyancy current usually takes place. In addition, the mixing efficiency increases from upper PRE to the shelf and from strong to weak mixing period, thus the plume in the well-mixed upper estuary is not as sensitive to the changes of wind and tide as that over the highly stratified shelf.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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