Impacts of the assimilation of satellite sea surface temperature data on
estimates of the volume and heat budgets of the North Sea
Abstract
The different mechanisms controlling the heat budget of the North Sea
are investigated based on a combination of satellite sea surface
temperature measurements and numerical model simulations. Lateral heat
fluxes across the shelf edge and into the Baltic Sea are considered, as
well as vertical ocean-atmosphere heat exchange. The 3DVAR data
assimilation (DA) scheme is applied, which contains assumed model error
correlations depending on the mixed layer depth derived from a coupled
circulation/ocean wave model. The simulated seawater temperature is
improved both at the surface and at greater water depths. DA is shown to
change the current velocity field and decrease the lateral advective
volume/heat exchanges between the North Sea and the Atlantic, yielding
an increased heat flux from the Atlantic into the North Sea and more
heat flux from the sea to the atmosphere. The largest DA impact on
volume/heat transport is found at the Norwegian Channel, where the
dominant process is Eulerian transport, followed by tidal pumping and
wind pumping, while other processes, such as Stokes transport, transport
driven by the annual mean wind stress, and tide-wind interactions, are
negligible. Further analysis reveals the acceleration of the along-shelf
current at the northern edge of the North Sea and a decrease in the
horizontal pressure gradient from the Atlantic to the North Sea. DA
changes the velocity field inside the Norwegian Channel and the
instability of the water column, which in turn reduces the Eulerian
transport of heat and water outward from the North Sea.