日本地球惑星科学連合2025年大会

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[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 A (大気水圏科学) » A-CG 大気海洋・環境科学複合領域・一般

[A-CG36] 中緯度大気海洋相互作用

2025年5月26日(月) 13:45 〜 15:15 101 (幕張メッセ国際会議場)

コンビーナ:安藤 雄太(九州大学大学院理学研究院)、王 童(海洋研究開発機構)、田村 健太(国立研究開発法人防災科学技術研究所)、桂 将太(東北大学大学院理学研究科地球物理学専攻)、座長:王 童(海洋研究開発機構)、田村 健太(国立研究開発法人防災科学技術研究所)、安藤 雄太(九州大学大学院理学研究院)、桂 将太(東北大学大学院理学研究科地球物理学専攻)


14:15 〜 14:30

[ACG36-09] Mesoscale atmosphere–ocean coupling resolved in global coupled simulations with NICOCO

*升永 竜介1宮川 知己2 (1.海洋研究開発機構、2.東京大学大気海洋研究所)

キーワード:大気海洋結合モデル、高水平解像度、大気海洋相互作用

Thanks to the advancement in the high-performance computing, a high-resolution global coupled simulation has become feasible. By using the Supercomputer “FUGAKU”, we conducted 40-day global coupled simulations with NICOCO, which consisted of the atmospheric model (NICAM) with 3.5km resolution and ocean model (COCO) with 0.1° resolution, along with some lower-resolution simulations. The present study investigates the resolution dependence of air-sea interaction processes focusing on the wintertime subtropical and midlatitude regions.
The lead-lag correlation between SST and surface heat fluxes suggests that mesoscale SST perturbations thermally force the atmosphere over the Kuroshio Extension (35°N) and subtropical front regions (25°N) in the North Pacific when the horizontal resolution of the ocean component is 0.1°. Additionally, the 3.5 km-resolution atmospheric component exhibits a stronger response to mesoscale ocean forcing compared to the 14 km-resolution component. On the contrary, the SST variability is mostly driven by atmospheric forcing in coupled simulations with a 0.25° ocean component. These features are largely consistent over the globe, including the South Pacific, North Atlantic and Indian Ocean. Therefore, high-resolution coupled simulations could possibly improve the representation in the larger-scale circulations because, as argued in the previous studies, ocean eddies and the western boundary currents significantly modulate synoptic-scale atmospheric disturbances. Long-term simulations should be conducted to quantify the roles of the fine-scale air-sea interaction on the global circulation.

Acknowledgements: This work was supported by MEXT as “Program for Promoting Researches on the Supercomputer Fugaku” (JPMXP1020200305) The simulations were conducted by using Supercomputer Fugaku provided by the RIKEN Center for Computational Science (Project ID: hp200128, hp210166, hp220167, hp230108, hp240179).