Local Grid Refinement in New Zealand’s Earth System Model: Tasman Sea
Ocean Circulation Improvements and Super-Gyre Circulation Implications
Abstract
This paper describes the development of New Zealand’s Earth System Model
(NZESM) and evaluates its performance against its parent model (United
Kingdom Earth System Model, UKESM) and observations. The main difference
between the two earth system models is an embedded high-resolution
(1/5°) nested region over the oceans around New Zealand in the NZESM.
Due to this finer ocean model mesh, boundary currents such as the East
Australian Current, East Australian Current Extension, Tasman Front and
Tasman Leakage and their transports are better simulated in NZESM. The
improved oceanic transports have led to a reduction in upper ocean
temperature and salinity biases over the nested region. In addition, net
transports through the Tasman Sea of volume, heat and salt in the NZESM
agree better with previously reported estimates. A consequence of the
increased cross-Tasman transports in the NZESM is increased temperatures
and salinity west of Australia and in the Southern Ocean reducing the
meridional sea surface temperature gradient between subtropics and
sub-Antarctic. This also leads to a weakening of the westerly winds
between 60S and 45S over large parts of the Southern Ocean, which
reduces the northward Ekman transport, reduces the formation of
Antarctic Intermediate Water and allows for a southward expansion of the
Super-Gyre in all ocean basins. Connecting an improved oceanic
circulation around New Zealand to a basin-wide Super-Gyre response is an
important step forward in our current understanding of how local scales
can influence global scales in a fully coupled earth system model.