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Dive into the research topics where Daisuke Hirano is active.

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Featured researches published by Daisuke Hirano.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

A wind-driven, hybrid latent and sensible heat coastal polynya off Barrow, Alaska

Daisuke Hirano; Yasushi Fukamachi; Eiji Watanabe; Kay I. Ohshima; Katsushi Iwamoto; Andrew R. Mahoney; Hajo Eicken; Daisuke Simizu; Takeshi Tamura

The nature of the Barrow Coastal Polynya (BCP), which forms episodically off the Alaska coast in winter, is examined using mooring data, atmospheric reanalysis data, and satellite-derived sea-ice concentration and production data. We focus on oceanographic conditions such as water mass distribution and ocean current structure beneath the BCP. Two moorings were deployed off Barrow, Alaska in the northeastern Chukchi Sea from August 2009 to July 2010. For sea-ice season from December to May, a characteristic sequence of five events associated with the BCP has been identified; (1) dominant northeasterly wind parallel to the Barrow Canyon, with an offshore component off Barrow, (2) high sea-ice production, (3) upwelling of warm and saline Atlantic Water beneath the BCP, (4) strong up-canyon shear flow associated with displaced density surfaces due to the upwelling, and (5) sudden suppression of ice growth. A baroclinic current structure, established after the upwelling, caused enhanced vertical shear and corresponding vertical mixing. The mixing event and open water formation occurred simultaneously, once sea-ice production had stopped. Thus, mixing events accompanied by ocean heat flux from the upwelled warm water into the surface layer played an important role in formation/maintenance of the open water area (i.e., sensible heat polynya). The transition from a latent to a sensible heat polynya is well reproduced by a high-resolution pan-Arctic ice-ocean model. We propose that the BCP, previously considered to be a latent heat polynya, is a wind-driven hybrid latent and sensible heat polynya, with both features caused by the same northeasterly wind.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Winter Water Formation in Coastal Polynyas of the Eastern Chukchi Shelf: Pacific and Atlantic Influences

Daisuke Hirano; Yasushi Fukamachi; Kay I. Ohshima; Eiji Watanabe; Andrew R. Mahoney; Hajo Eicken; Motoyo Itoh; Daisuke Simizu; Katsushi Iwamoto; Joshua Jones; Toru Takatsuka; Takashi Kikuchi; Takeshi Tamura

Water properties and formation processes of Alaskan Coastal Winter Water (ACWW) over the eastern Chukchi shelf along the Alaska coast, the so-called Barrow Canyon pathway, are examined using data from moorings, atmospheric reanalysis, satellite-derived sea-ice production (SIP), and a numerical tracer experiment. Along this pathway, Pacific Winter Water (PWW) can be modified to produce ACWW through SIP accompanied by production of cold, saline polynya water in the coastal polynyas, upwelling of warm Atlantic Water (AW), and mixing processes on the shelf. Three different types of ACWW are formed: (i) a mixture of AW and PWW, (ii) a mixture of AW and polynya water, and (iii) hypersaline polynya water. The northeasterly winds, correlated with the north-south atmospheric pressure gradient between Beaufort High and Aleutian Low, are common triggers of polynya SIP episodes and AW upwelling in the Barrow Coastal Polynya (BCP). Due to the dual impact of northeasterly winds, PWW modification processes in the BCP are more complicated than what occurs elsewhere in the Chukchi Polynya. The impact of AW upwelling on the ACWW formation is most prominent in the BCP, usually centered along the coast. All types of ACWW are thought to be basically transported westward or northwestward with the Chukchi slope current and/or Beaufort Gyre and finally contribute to maintenance of the lower halocline layer especially over the Chukchi Borderland, Northwind Ridge, and southern Canada Basin. Even in the Pacific sector of the Arctic Ocean, ACWW properties are strongly influenced by both Atlantic-origin and Pacific-origin waters.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

The role of turbulent mixing in the modified Shelf Water overflows that produce Cape Darnley Bottom Water

Daisuke Hirano; Yujiro Kitade; Kay I. Ohshima; Yasushi Fukamachi

The mixing process associated with modified Shelf Water (mSW) overflows that eventually mix to form Cape Darnley Bottom Water (CDBW) was investigated by hydrographic and microstructure observations off the Cape Darnley Polynya (CDP), East Antarctica, in January 2009. Closely spaced microstructure observations revealed that mSW properties varied considerably within a distance of ∼4 km across the shelf edge. Near the bottom, the rate of turbulent kinetic energy dissipation was enhanced to values greater than 10−7 W kg−1, and the vertical scale of the bottom boundary layer (BBL) was on the order of 10 m. The observed BBL around the shelf edge was characterized by strong vertical mixing with turbulent eddy diffusivities of ∼O(10−3−10−2) m2 s−1. A geostrophically balanced density current, which resulted from the presence of mSW over the continental shelf, is considered the primary energy source for the turbulent mixing in the BBL. This turbulent mixing transforms the overflowing mSW through mixing with ambient water masses, specifically with the overlying modified Circumpolar Deep Water. The BBL is also thought to partly contribute to the gradual descent of mSW down the continental slope through bottom Ekman transport. We conclude that turbulent mixing, primarily caused by a density current, plays an important role in CDBW formation, by modifying the mSW overflowing from the CDP.


Nature Geoscience | 2013

Antarctic Bottom Water production by intense sea-ice formation in the Cape Darnley polynya

Kay I. Ohshima; Yasushi Fukamachi; Gd Williams; Sohey Nihashi; Fabien Roquet; Yujiro Kitade; Takeshi Tamura; Daisuke Hirano; Laura Herraiz-Borreguero; Iain C. Field; Mark A. Hindell; Shigeru Aoki; Masaaki Wakatsuchi


Polar Science | 2010

Estimating the biodiversity of the East Antarctic shelf and oceanic zone for ecoregionalisation: Example of the ichthyofauna of the CEAMARC (Collaborative East Antarctic Marine Census) CAML surveys

Philippe Koubbi; Catherine Ozouf-Costaz; Anne Goarant; Masato Moteki; Percy-Alexander Hulley; Romain Causse; Agnès Dettai; Guy Duhamel; Patrice Pruvost; Eric Tavernier; Alexandra L. Post; Robin J. Beaman; Stephen R. Rintoul; Toru Hirawake; Daisuke Hirano; Takashi Ishimaru; Martin J. Riddle; Graham W. Hosie


Polar Science | 2011

Distribution and density of Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) and ice krill (E. crystallorophias) off Adélie Land in austral summer 2008 estimated by acoustical methods

Kazuo Amakasu; Atsushi Ono; Daisuke Hirano; Masato Moteki; Takashi Ishimaru


Polar Science | 2011

Euphausiid community structure and population structure of Euphausia superba off Adélie Land in the Southern Ocean during austral summer 2003, 2005 and 2008

Atsushi Ono; Masato Moteki; Kazuo Amakasu; Ryoji Toda; Naho Horimoto; Daisuke Hirano; Takashi Ishimaru; Graham W. Hosie


Journal of Oceanography | 2010

Characteristics of observed turbulent mixing across the Antarctic Slope Front at 140°E, East Antarctica

Daisuke Hirano; Yujiro Kitade; Hideki Nagashima; Masaji Matsuyama


Polar Science | 2017

Meso-zooplankton abundance and spatial distribution off Lutzow-Holm Bay during austral summer 2007-2008

Ryosuke Makabe; Atsushi Tanimura; Takeshi Tamura; Daisuke Hirano; Keishi Shimada; Fuminori Hashihama; Mitsuo Fukuchi


Japan Geoscience Union | 2017

Observations of ice tongue-ocean interaction at Shirase Glacier

Daisuke Hirano; Takeshi Tamura; Shuki Ushio; Kay I. Ohshima; Daisuke Simizu; Kazuya Ono; Tomohide Noguchi; Shigeru Aoki

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Takeshi Tamura

Cooperative Research Centre

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Yujiro Kitade

Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology

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Eiji Watanabe

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Katsushi Iwamoto

National Institute of Polar Research

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Masato Moteki

Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology

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Takashi Ishimaru

Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology

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