Abstract

Abstract. We describe the physical model component of the standard Coastal Ocean version 5 configuration (CO5) of the European north-west shelf (NWS). CO5 was developed jointly between the Met Office and the National Oceanography Centre. CO5 is designed with the seamless approach in mind, which allows for modelling of multiple timescales for a variety of applications from short-range ocean forecasting to climate projections. The configuration constitutes the basis of the latest update to the ocean and data assimilation components of the Met Office's operational Forecast Ocean Assimilation Model (FOAM) for the NWS. A 30.5-year non-assimilating control hindcast of CO5 was integrated from January 1981 to June 2012. Sensitivity simulations were conducted with reference to the control run. The control run is compared against a previous non-assimilating Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory Coastal Ocean Modelling System (POLCOMS) hindcast of the NWS. The CO5 control hindcast is shown to have much reduced biases compared to POLCOMS. Emphasis in the system description is weighted to updates in CO5 over previous versions. Updates include an increase in vertical resolution, a new vertical coordinate stretching function, the replacement of climatological riverine sources with the pan-European hydrological model E-HYPE, a new Baltic boundary condition and switching from directly imposed atmospheric model boundary fluxes to calculating the fluxes within the model using a bulk formula. Sensitivity tests of the updates are detailed with a view toward attributing observed changes in the new system from the previous system and suggesting future directions of research to further improve the system.

Highlights

  • The European north-west shelf (NWS) is an area of intense socioeconomic interest with a wide variety of dynamical regimes

  • The inputs at the oceanic lateral boundary conditions and the surface boundary condition (SBC) for the 30-year hindcast are substantially different from the shorter runs detailed for the forecast implementation of CO4 in O’Dea et al (2012)

  • We describe in detail each of the changes, and in Sect. 4 a set of sensitivity experiments explores the impacts of these changes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The European north-west shelf (NWS) is an area of intense socioeconomic interest with a wide variety of dynamical regimes. It is a region that has been the subject of numerous research models over many years both domain-wide and focusing on smaller subregions. Research models and associated assimilation schemes for the region have matured into a number of operational systems. The AMM term refers to the model domain rather than the full configuration for the NWS as implemented at the Met Office.

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call