4.7 Article

Mesoscale Eddies in the Black Sea and Their Impact on River Plumes: Numerical Modeling and Satellite Observations

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 14, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs14174149

Keywords

topographically generated mesoscale eddies; relative vorticity; river plumes; eddy-plume interaction; DieCAST model; Lagrangian modeling; wavelet analysis; Black Sea

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation [FMWE-2021-0001]
  2. Russian Science Foundation [18-17-00156]

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This study investigates the generation and evolution of the Northeast Caucasian Current (NCC) in the Black Sea and its impact on river plumes. The findings reveal the significant role of topographically generated cyclonic eddies in self-cleansing and cross-shelf transport of riverine matter.
The Northeast Caucasian Current (NCC) is the northeastern part of the cyclonic Rim Current (RC) in the Black Sea. As it sometimes approaches the narrow shelf very closely, topographically generated cyclonic eddies (TGEs) can be triggered. These eddies contribute to intense, along- and cross-shelf transport of trapped water with enhanced self-cleaning effects of the coastal zone. Despite intense studies of eddy dynamics in the Black Sea, the mechanisms of the generation of such coastal eddies, their unpredictability, and their capacity to capture and transport impurities are still poorly understood. We applied a 3-D low-dissipation model DieCAST/Die2BS coupled with a Lagrangian particle transport model supported by analysis of optical satellite images to study generation and evolution of TGEs and their effect on river plumes unevenly distributed along the northeastern Caucasian coast. Using the Furrier and wavelet analyses of kinetic energy time series, it was revealed that the occurrence of mesoscale TGEs ranges from 10 up to 50 days. We focused on one particular isolated anticyclonic TGE that emerged in late fall as a result of instability of the RC impinging on the abrupt submarine area adjoining the Pitsunda and Iskuria capes. Being shed, the eddy with a 30-km radius traveled along the coast as a coherent structure during similar to 1.5 months at a velocity of similar to 3 km/day and vertical vorticity normalized by the Coriolis parameter similar to(0.1 divided by 1.2). This eddy captured water from river plumes localized along the coast and then ejected it to the open sea, providing an intense cross-shelf transport of riverine matter.

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