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Estimate of the shelf residence time using a 2-km resolution Japanese coastal model
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  • Kei Sakamoto,
  • Hiroyuki Tsujino,
  • Hideyuki Nakano,
  • Shogo Urakawa,
  • Takahiro Toyoda,
  • Goro Yamanaka
Kei Sakamoto
Meteorological Research Institute

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Hiroyuki Tsujino
Meteorological Research Institute
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Hideyuki Nakano
Meteorological Research Institute
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Shogo Urakawa
Meteorological Research Institute
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Takahiro Toyoda
Meteorological Research Institute
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Goro Yamanaka
Meteorological Research Inst.
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Abstract

Mean residence time of the seawater in the shelf region, τ, has been studied in several closed bays and inland seas around Japan. From previous estimates of 0.69 months in the Ise Bay and 6.4-14.7 months in the Seto Inland Sea, τ is expected to vary depending on area, but there is no research that reveals the whole picture of the spatiotemporal variation of τ around Japan. As the first step, we estimate τ for the entire coastal regions using the 2-km resolution Japanese coastal model “MRI.COM-JPN” that we developed for a JMA operational system. The model reproduces well tides, river inflows and many coastal currents around Japan, which are necessary to simulate the basic physical processes of coastal-offshore water exchange. In order to estimate τ, an experiment was conducted to run an “age tracer” that takes an age while existing in the shelf region and then resets the age to zero offshore. The tracer value can be regarded as the mean residence time τ of the seawater flowing into the shelf region. The model was driven for 9 years, and the results from the last 7 years were used for the analysis. Results showed that in many coastal areas, τ ranged from 20 to 100 days. In eight closed areas such as the Tokyo Bay and the Seto Inland Sea, τ reached 100-450 days. In addition, τ was as long as 100-200 days in the downstream of the two coastal currents originating from continental shelves, the Tsushima Warm Current and the East Sakhalin Current. On the other hand, τ on the Pacific side, including the southern coast of Japan where the Kuroshio Current flows offshore, was as short as several to 20 days. At presentation, we will also discuss results of a particle tracking experiment.