Atmospheric forcing of the winter air-sea heat fluxes over the northern Red Sea

by V. Papadopoulos, Y. AbuAlnaja, A. Bower, D. Raitsos, H. Kontoyiannis, I. Hoteit
Year: 2013

Bibliography

Atmospheric forcing of the winter air-sea heat fluxes over the northern Red Sea
V. Papadopoulos, Y. Abualnaja, A. Bower, D. Raitsos, H. Kontoyiannis, and I. Hoteit
Journal of Climate, 26, 1685-1701, 2013

Abstract

​The influence of the atmospheric circulation on the winter air-sea heat fluxes over the northern Red Sea is investigated during the period 1985-2011. The analysis based on daily heat flux values reveals that most of the net surface heat exchange variability depends on the behavior of the turbulent components of the surface flux (the sum of the latent and sensible heat).The large-scale composite sea level pressure (SLP) maps corresponding to turbulent flux minima and maxima show distinct atmospheric circulation patterns associated with each case. In general, extreme heat loss (with turbulent flux lower than -400 W m-2) over the northern Red Sea is observed when anticyclonic conditions prevail over an area extending from the Mediterranean Sea to eastern Asia along with a recession of the equatorial African lowssystem. Subcenters of high pressure associated with this pattern generatethe required steep SLP gradient that enhances the wind magnitude and transfers cold and dry air masses from higher latitudes. Conversely, turbulent fluxmaxima (heat loss minimization with values from -100 to -50 W m-2) are associated with prevailing low pressures over the eastern Mediterranean andan extended equatorial African low that reaches the southern part of the Red Sea. In this case, a smooth SLP field over the northern Red Sea results in weak winds over the area that in turn reduce the surface heat loss. At the same time, southerlies blowing along the main axis of the Red Sea transfer warm and humid air northward, favoring heat flux maxima.

DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00267.1

Keywords

Air-sea Interaction Extreme Events Forcing Surface Fluxes Trends