Abstract

The southward propagation of cold-air frontal boundaries into the Gulf of Mexico region initiates a cascade of coupled air–sea processes that manifests along the coastlines as an apparent brightness anomaly in the ocean color signals. Our hypothesis is that the color anomaly is largely due to the turbulent resuspension of sedimentary particles. Initially, there is significant wind-driven ocean turbulence as the frontal boundary passes, followed by the potential for sustained convective instability due to significant heat losses from the ocean surface. These cold front events occur during boreal autumn, winter, and into early spring, and the latter episodes occur in the context of the seasonally recurring thermal stratification of shelf waters. Here, we show that as stratification reasserts thermal stability in the waning days of a cold front episode, daily to hourly ocean color patterns are temporally coherent with the air–sea heat flux changes and the resulting impact on water column stability. Concomitant results from a nested, data-assimilative, and two-way coupled ocean-atmosphere numerical modeling system provides both corroboration and insight into how surface air–sea fluxes and in-water turbulent mixing manifest as hourly changes in apparent surface water turbidity due to the potential excitation and settling of reflective particles. A simple model of particle mixing and settling driven by the simulated turbulence mimics patterns seen in the satellite image sequences. This study offers a preview of potential application areas that may emerge following the launch of a dedicated ocean color geostationary sensor.

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