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The spray contribution to net evaporation from the sea: A review of recent progress
Authors:Edgar L Andreas  James B. Edson  Edward C. Monahan  Mathieu P. Rouault  Stuart D. Smith
Affiliation:(1) U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, 03755 Hanover, New Hampshire, USA;(2) Department of Applied Ocean Physics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 02543 Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA;(3) Marine Sciences Institute, University of Connecticut at Avery Point, 06340 Groton, Connecticut, USA;(4) Department of Oceanography, University of Cape Town, 7700 Rondebosch, Republic of South Africa;(5) Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, B2Y 4A2 Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada
Abstract:The part that sea spray plays in the air-sea transfer of heat and moisture has been a controversial question for the last two decades. With general circulation models (GCMs) suggesting that perturbations in the Earth's surface heat budget of only a few W m–2 can initiate major climatic variations, it is crucial that we identify and quantify all the terms in that heat budget. Thus, here we review recent work on how sea spray contributes to the sea surface heat and moisture budgets. In the presence of spray, the near-surface atmosphere is characterized by a droplet evaporation layer (DEL) with a height that scales with the significant-wave amplitude. The majority of spray transfer processes occur within this layer. As a result, the DEL is cooler and more moist than the atmospheric surface layer would be under identical conditions but without the spray. Also, because the spray in the DEL provides elevated sources and sinks for heat and moisture, the vertical heat fluxes are no longer constant with height. We use Eulerian and Lagrangian models and a simple analytical model to study the processes important in spray droplet dispersion and evaporation within this DEL. These models all point to the conclusion that, in high winds (above about 15 m/s), sea spray begins to contribute significantly to the air-sea fluxes of heat and moisture. For example, we estimate that, in a 20-m/s wind, with an air temperature of 20°C, a sea surface temperature of 22°C, and a relative humidity of 80%, the latent and sensible heat fluxes resulting from the spray alone will have magnitudes of order 150 and 15 W/m2, respectively, in the DEL. Finally, we speculate on what fraction of these fluxes rise out of the DEL and, thus, become available to the entire marine boundary layer.
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