Impact of Horizontal Model Resolution on Mixing and Dispersion in the
Northeastern Gulf of Mexico
Abstract
In this paper, the importance of model horizontal resolution in
identifying the nature of mixing and dispersion is investigated by
comparing two data-assimilative, high-resolution simulations (4km and
1km), one of which is submesoscale-resolving. By employing both Eulerian
and Lagrangian metrics, upper-ocean differences between the mesoscale-
and submesoscale-resolving simulations are examined in the northeastern
Gulf of Mexico, a region of high mesoscale and submesoscale activity.
The nature of mixing in both simulations is identified by conducting
Lagrangian experiments to track the generation of Lagrangian Coherent
Structures (LCSs) and their associated transport barriers. Finite-time
Lyapunov exponents (FTLE) fields show higher separation rates of fluid
particles in the submesoscale-resolving case which indicate more
vigorous mixing, with differences being more pronounced in the shelf
regions (depths<=500m). The extent of the mixing homogeneity
is examined by using probability density functions (PDFs) with results
suggesting that mixing is heterogeneous in both simulations, but some
homogeneity is exhibited in the submesoscale-resolving case. The FTLE
fields also indicate that chaotic stirring dominates turbulent mixing in
both simulations regardless of the horizontal resolution. In the
submesoscale-resolving experiment, however, smaller scale LCSs emerge as
noise-like filaments that suggest a larger turbulent mixing component
than in the mesoscale-resolving experiment. The impact of resolution is
then explored by investigating the spread of oil particles at the
location of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.