Bernard Laval, Jorg Imberger, Ben R. Hodges, Roman Stocker
B. Laval, J. Imberger, B.R. Hodges, and R. Stocker, “Modeling circulation in lakes: spatial and temporal variations,” Limnology and Oceanography, 48(3):983:994, May, 2003. http://doi.org/10.4319/lo.2003.48.3.0983
Publication year: 2003

ABSTRACT: The influence of spatial and temporal variations in wind forcing on the circulation in lakes is investigated using field data and the three‐dimensional Estuary and Lake Computer Model (ELCOM) applied to Lake Kinneret. Lake Kinneret field data from six thermistor chains and eight wind anemometers deployed during July 2001 are presented. Internal wave motions are well reproduced by the numerical model when forced with a spatially uniform wind taken from a station near the lake center; however, simulated seiche amplitudes are too large (especially vertical mode 2) and lead observations by 3–10 h (for a 24‐h period wave) at different locations around the lake. Consideration of the spatial variation of the wind field improves simulated wave amplitude, and phase error at all stations is reduced to less than 1.5 h. This improvement is attributable to a better representation of the horizontally averaged wind stress and can be reproduced with a spatially uniform wind that has the same horizontally averaged wind stress as the spatially varying wind field. However, a spatially varying wind field is essential for simulating mean surface circulation, which is shown to be predominantly directly forced by the surface‐layer‐averaged wind stress moment.

EXTRACT: Figure 6:

Fig. 6. Snapshots of the spatially interpolated wind field over Lake Kinneret at four different times during day 177. Data were bilinearly interpolated from the eight measurement stations shown in Fig. 1 to the surface of the ELCOM grid. Only every third data point is shown. A comparison of this figure with Fig. 12 of Avissar and Pan (2000) reveals good qualitative agreement.