Dynamical downscaling of unforced interannual sea-level variability in the North-West European shelf seas

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Jonathan Tinker (Met Office)

Matthew D. Palmer (Met Office)

Dan Copsey (Met Office)

Tom Howard (Met Office)

Jason A. Lowe (University of Leeds, Met Office)

Tim H.J. Hermans (Universiteit Utrecht, TU Delft - Physical and Space Geodesy, NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research)

Research Group
Physical and Space Geodesy
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-020-05378-0
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Research Group
Physical and Space Geodesy
Issue number
7-8
Volume number
55
Pages (from-to)
2207-2236
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Abstract

Variability of Sea-Surface Height (SSH) from ocean dynamic processes is an important component of sea-level change. In this study we dynamically downscale a present-day control simulation of a climate model to replicate sea-level variability in the Northwest European shelf seas. The simulation can reproduce many characteristics of sea-level variability exhibited in tide gauge and satellite altimeter observations. We examine the roles of lateral ocean boundary conditions and surface atmospheric forcings in determining the sea-level variability in the model interior using sensitivity experiments. Variability in the oceanic boundary conditions leads to uniform sea-level variations across the shelf. Atmospheric variability leads to spatial SSH variability with a greater mean amplitude. We separate the SSH variability into a uniform loading term (change in shelf volume with no change in distribution), and a spatial redistribution term (with no volume change). The shelf loading variance accounted for 80% of the shelf mean total variance, but this drops to ~ 60% around Scotland and in the southeast North Sea. We analyse our modelled variability to provide a useful context to coastal planners and managers. Our 200-year simulation allows the distribution of the unforced trends (over 4–21 year) of sea-level changes to be quantified. We found that the 95th percentile change over a 4-year period can lead to coastal sea-level changes of ~ 58 mm, which must be considered when using smooth sea level projections. We also found that simulated coastal SSH variations have long correlation length-scales, suggesting that observations of interannual sea-level variability from tide gauges are typically representative of > 200 km of the adjacent coast. This helps guide the use of tide gauge variability estimates.