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Here we formulate a set of questions about the atmospheric flow over
the eastern Pacific and the underlying ocean which are relevant to the
coupled ocean-atmosphere problem. The specific scientific objectives
of EPIC2001 are to answer these questions. These objectives correlate
with the overall objectives of EPIC, which are reproduced in the
introduction.
- 1.
- How are the location, strength, and other characteristics of ITCZ
convection determined? This breaks into a number of sub-questions:
- (a)
- What mechanism or set of mechanisms forces convection in the east
Pacific ITCZ? A wide variety of mechanisms proposed over the years
can be tested, including Ekman pumping, temperature and pressure
gradient forcing, enhancement of surface fluxes, free tropospheric
moisture enhancement, etc.
- (b)
- What factors are responsible for the fluctuations in strength and
position of the east Pacific ITCZ on weekly time scales? Are these
truly due to impinging easterly waves acting directly or indirectly on
the east Pacific? What causes the ITCZ to move northward under these
circumstances? Do coastal jets play a role in this evolution? What
about barotropic instability?
- (c)
- How do the characteristics of ITCZ convection vary through the diurnal
cycle?
- 2.
- How does the lower branch of the east Pacific Hadley cell evolve as
it flows across the equator and into the ITCZ? Sub-questions:
- (a)
- How do the thermodynamic characteristics of this convective inflow
change, in response to surface and boundary layer top fluxes, as the
air moves from the southern hemisphere stratus region toward higher
SSTs? We already know that the ABL is stably stratified over the cold
equatorial waters and that surface winds are weak relative to the low
level jet maximum there. Further north over higher SSTs surface winds
are stronger (Wallace, Mitchell, and Deser, 1989).
- (b)
- How does the strength and structure of this inflow vary as ITCZ
convection waxes and wanes?
- (c)
- How do cloudiness and wind stress curl in this region affect the ocean
mixed layer?
- 3.
- What factors determine the temperature, salinity, and thickness of the
oceanic mixed layer in the east Pacific warm pool? Sub-questions:
- (a)
- What are the distributions of longwave and shortwave radiative fluxes
at the ocean surface, the latent and sensible heat fluxes out of the
ocean, the precipitation rate, and the wind stress curl in various
conditions?
- (b)
- What controls the entrainment of water from below into the oceanic
mixed layer? In particular, how important are the effects of
energetic but episodic atmospheric forcing events relative to
time-mean forcing?
- (c)
- How important to ocean mixed layer characteristics is horizontal
advection relative to upwelling/downwelling, entrainment from below,
and in situ thermodynamic processes in these regions?
- 4.
- How effective are marine stratiform clouds in cooling the underlying
ocean as southern hemisphere ABL air moves across the cold tongue and
into the ITCZ region? Sub-questions:
- (a)
- What is the meridional distribution of liquid water content of the
stratus clouds and their drop size distribution? These parameters
determine the albedo of the stratus.
- (b)
- What are the fractional coverage and radiative properties of low
clouds?
- (c)
- Can these factors be used to explain the observed radiation balance at
the ocean surface?
Next: Experiment Design and Observational
Up: EPIC2001: Overview and Implementation
Previous: Stratus Region
D. J. Raymond
1999-12-13