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The Sensitivity of British Weather to Ocean Tides

Alex Arnold, Huw Lewis, Patrick Hyder, John Siddorn, Enda O’Dea

2020Geophysical Research Letters19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Tides in shelf seas greatly impact ocean mixing and temperature structure. Using a regional‐coupled ocean–atmosphere prediction system, at ocean coastal process and atmosphere convection permitting scales, we assess the influence of tides on British weather by comparing simulations with and without tides. In summer, when seasonal stratification is particularly sensitive to tides, the sea‐surface temperature is up to 6 K cooler in simulations with tidal mixing. Tides cool the air temperature over the sea by up to 3 K, and nearby land by up to 1.4 K. The mean air temperature across Great Britain land areas cools by 0.3 K with tides. Changes in near‐surface stability result in decreases in summer mean wind speeds over the ocean. A 6% reduction in summer precipitation is found with tides, consistent with cooler temperatures. This study has implications for climate projections since global‐coupled models typically do not include tides.

Topics & Concepts

Stratification (seeds)Environmental scienceClimatologySea surface temperatureAtmospheric instabilityAtmosphere (unit)PrecipitationOceanographyConvectionAtmospheric sciencesGeologyWind speedMeteorologyGeographySeed dormancyBiologyDormancyGerminationBotanyOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesClimate variability and modelsMarine and coastal ecosystems
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