Sammendrag
Benguela
Niņos: Observations and modelling
Hovedfagsoppgave i Oseanografi, 2004
Kandidat: Elisabeth Hansen, Veileder: Tor Gammelsrød
Geofysisk Institutt, UiB
Hele oppgaven finnes på http://www.ub.uib.no/elpub/2004/h/406002/Hovedoppgave.pdf
A numerical ocean model for the South Atlantic was used to study the 1995 Benguela Niño in order to learn about the underlying forcing mechanisms of the phenomenon. By comparing observations and model output, it was found that the model WANE was unable to simulate the thermohaline signal of the 1995 event. It proved more successful at reproducing the current systems of the area. Another model simulation (OPA) was able to recreate both the surface and subsurface temperature signal of the 1984 and 1995 Benguela Niño. The main reason for the poor water mass representation during a warm event in WANE is probably the relaxation of the surface fluxes towards climatology.
An investigation of the movements of a drifter buoy and winds during the 1995
Benguela Niño revealed a strong poleward current that moved against the
southerly winds, indicating that local winds are not the main driving force
of the phenomenon. It is believed that the origin of Benguela Niños is
found in the western part of the equatorial Atlantic; as the trade winds off
the coast of Brazil weaken, this relaxation leads to the generation of equatorial
Kelvin waves which propagates across the equator and poleward along the coast
of Africa. The east-west component of the wind in the western equatorial Atlantic
was examined, and there seems to be a relationship between the winds off Brazil
and the Benguela Niños. Both numerical model simulations and the wind
data support the governing theory of the generation and forcing mechanisms of
Benguela Niños.