13th Conference on Interactions of the Sea and Atmosphere

P1.5

A bulk air-sea flux algorithm for high-wind, spray conditions, version 2.0

Edgar L. Andreas, U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, Hanover, NH

When sea spray proliferates in high winds, the droplets essentially increase the ocean’s surface area and, thereby, provide new routes for the air-sea transfer of sensible and latent heat. Newly created spray droplets also accelerate almost immediately to the local wind speed and, thus, extract momentum from the wind. When they ultimately crash back into the surface, they deliver this momentum to the sea. In short, when sea spray is present in copious amounts, it alters air-sea coupling through the turbulent fluxes.

In this presentation, I will describe Version 2.0 of a bulk air-sea flux algorithm that I have developed to compute both interfacial and spray fluxes of sensible heat, latent heat, and momentum. The ultimate application is in large-scale, coupled air-sea interaction models. The algorithm relies on microphysical theory and a reliable expression for the spray generation function; I validate it with heat flux data from HEXOS, the experiment to study Humidity Exchange over the Sea. Version 2.0 improves on previous versions of the algorithm by incorporating a more realistic dependence on surface temperature and a better parameterization for very high relative humidity.

extended abstract  Extended Abstract (316K)

Poster Session 1, All aspects of ocean-atmosphere interaction
Tuesday, 10 August 2004, 5:30 PM-7:00 PM, Casco Bay Exhibit Hall

Previous paper  

Browse or search entire meeting

AMS Home Page