Title of article :
Simulation of temperature, salinity and suspended matter distributions induced by the discharge into the East China Sea during the 1998 flood of the Yangtze River
Author/Authors :
Masataka Watanabe، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
A three-dimensional model simulated the distributions of current, water temperature, salinity and suspended matter in the Yangtze estuary
area and the East China Sea caused by the discharge of freshwater from the Yangtze (Changjiang) River for 3 years from May 1996 to April
1999. The calculation was conducted using a longitudeelatitude mesh of 5 min 5 min, in assimilating the daily average discharge from the
Yangtze with the meteorological conditions on the sea surface obtained from the atmospheric global circulation model (European Centre for
Medium-range Weather Forecasts, ECMWF) and the daily average precipitation over the sea surface obtained from the TRMM (Tropical
Rainfall Measuring Mission) satellite data. The calculated water temperatures were in excellent agreement with the measurement data observed
by the marine meteorological buoy robot (ST22001). For the surface salinity distribution on the eastewest transection line across the East China
Sea and the cross-sectional distribution of salinity in the Tsushima Strait, the calculated values were in excellent agreement with the observed
data. During the Yangtze flood in 1998, turbid water was discharged in repeated pulses from the Yangtze and penetrated the East China Sea. This
behavior of suspended matter discharged from the Yangtze was clearly identified by the 3D model results in salinity, suspended matter and
current distributions. The model results revealed the fact that the freshwater and suspended matter originating from the Yangtze crossed the
East China Sea and reached as far as the coasts of Kyushu, the Japan Sea and the Pacific coast of mainland Japan.
Keywords :
freshwater discharge , Tsushima Strait
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science