The evolution of a buoyant river plume in response to a pulse of high discharge from a small midlatitude river
The evolution of a buoyant river plume in response to a pulse of high discharge from a small midlatitude river
Date
2020-07-01
Authors
Lemagie, Emily
Lerczak, James A.
Lerczak, James A.
Linked Authors
Alternative Title
Citable URI
As Published
Date Created
Location
DOI
10.1175/JPO-D-19-0127.1
Related Materials
Replaces
Replaced By
Keywords
Abstract
A unique feature of small mountainous rivers is that discharge can be elevated by an order of magnitude during a large rain event. The impact of time-varying discharge on freshwater transport pathways and alongshore propagation rates in the coastal ocean is not well understood. A suite of simulations in an idealized coastal ocean domain using the Regional Ocean Modeling System (ROMS) with varying steady background discharge conditions (25–100 m3 s−1), pulse amplitude (200–800 m3 s−1), pulse duration (1–6 days), and steady downwelling-favorable winds (0–4 m s−1) are compared to investigate the downstream freshwater transport along the coast (in the direction of Kelvin wave propagation) following a discharge pulse from the river. The nose of the pulse propagates rapidly alongshore at 0.04–0.32 m s−1 (faster propagation corresponds with larger pulse volume and faster winds) transporting 13%–66% of the discharge. The remainder of the discharge volume initially accumulates in the bulge near the river mouth, with lower retention for longer pulse duration and stronger winds. Following the pulse, the bulge eddy disconnects from the river mouth and is advected downstream at 0–0.1 m s−1, equal to the depth-averaged wind-driven ambient water velocity. As it transits alongshore, it sheds freshwater volume farther downstream and the alongshore freshwater transport stays elevated between the nose and the transient bulge eddy. The evolution of freshwater transport at a plume cross section can be described by the background discharge, the passage of the pulse nose, and a slow exponential return to background conditions.
Description
Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2020. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Physical Oceanography 50(7),(2020): 1915-1935, https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-19-0127.1.
Embargo Date
Citation
Lemagie, E., & Lerczak, J. (2020). The evolution of a buoyant river plume in response to a pulse of high discharge from a small midlatitude river. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 50(7), 1915-1935.