J.-M. Molines
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by J.-M. Molines.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2001
Anne-Marie Treguier; Bernard Barnier; A De Miranda; J.-M. Molines; Nicolas Grima; Maurice Imbard; Gurvan Madec; Christophe Messager; Thierry Reynaud; Sylvain Michel
As part of the French CLIPPER project, an eddy permitting model of the Atlantic circulation has been run for 22 years. The domain has open boundaries at Drake passage and at 30°E, from Africa to Antarctica. The simulated mean circulation, as well as the eddy activity, is satisfactory for a 1/3° model resolution, and the meridional heat transport at 30°S is within the range estimated from observations. We use the “mixed” open boundary algorithm of Barnier et al. [1998], which has both a radiation condition and a relaxation to climatology. The climatological boundary forcing strongly constrains the solution in the whole domain. The model heat balance adjusts through the surface (heat flux retroaction term) more than the open boundaries. The radiation phase velocities calculated within the algorithm are analyzed. This shows, quite surprisingly, that both the eastern and western boundaries have a similar behavior, regardless of the preferred directions for advection (mainly eastward) and wave propagation (mainly westward). Our results confirm that open boundary algorithms behave differently according to the dynamics of the region considered. The passive boundary condition that Penduff et al. [2000] applied successfully in the north eastern Atlantic does not work in the present South Atlantic model. We emphasize the need for a careful prescription of the climatology at the open boundary, for which a new approach based on synoptic sections is implemented.
Climate Dynamics | 2012
Matthieu Lengaigne; Ute Hausmann; Gurvan Madec; Christophe Menkes; Jérôme Vialard; J.-M. Molines
Variations of the volume of warm water above the thermocline in the equatorial Pacific are a good predictor of ENSO (El Niño/Southern Oscillation) and are thought to be critical for its preconditioning and development. In this study, the Warm Water Volume (WWV) interannual variability is analysed using forced general circulation model experiments and an original method for diagnosing processes responsible for WWV variations. The meridional recharge/discharge to higher latitudes drives 60% of the ENSO-related equatorial WWV variations, while diabatic processes in the eastern equatorial Pacific account for the remaining 40%. Interior meridional transport is partially compensated by western boundary transports, especially in the southern hemisphere. Diabatic equatorial WWV formation (depletions) during La Niña (El Niño) are explained by enhanced (reduced) diathermal transport through enhanced (reduced) vertical mixing and penetrating solar forcing at the 20°C isotherm depth. The respective contribution of diabatic and adiabatic processes during build-ups/depletions strongly varies from event-to-event. The WWV build-up during neutral ENSO phases (e.g. 1980–1982) is almost entirely controlled by meridional recharge, providing a text-book example for the recharge/discharge oscillator’s theory. On the other hand, diabatic processes are particularly active during the strongest La Niña events (1984, 1988, 1999), contributing to more than 70% of the WWV build-up, with heating by penetrative solar fluxes explaining as much as 30% of the total build-up due to a very shallow thermocline in the eastern Pacific. This study does not invalidate the recharge/discharge oscillator theory but rather emphasizes the importance of equatorial diabatic processes and western boundary transports in controlling WWV changes.
CLIVAR Exchanges, 42 (12 (3)). pp. 8-10. | 2007
Bernard Barnier; Laurent Brodeau; J. Le Sommer; J.-M. Molines; Thierry Penduff; Sébastien Theetten; Anne-Marie Treguier; Gurvan Madec; Arne Biastoch; Claus W. Böning; Joachim Dengg; Sergei K. Gulev; R. Bourdalle Badie; Jerome Chanut; G. Garric; S.G. Alderson; Andrew C. Coward; B. de Cuevas; Adrian L. New; Keith Haines; G. Smith; Sybren S. Drijfhout; Wilco Hazeleger; C. Severijns; Paul G. Myers
Ocean Science | 2007
Thierry Penduff; J. Le Sommer; Bernard Barnier; Anne-Marie Treguier; J.-M. Molines; Gurvan Madec
Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2010
Anne-Marie Treguier; J. Le Sommer; J.-M. Molines; B. de Cuevas
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
Julie Deshayes; Anne-Marie Treguier; Bernard Barnier; A. Lecointre; J. Le Sommer; J.-M. Molines; Thierry Penduff; Romain Bourdallé-Badie; Y. Drillet; G. Garric; Rachid Benshila; Gurvan Madec; Arne Biastoch; Claus W. Böning; Markus Scheinert; Andrew C. Coward; Joël J.-M. Hirschi
Ocean Modelling | 2017
Nicolas Ducousso; J. Le Sommer; J.-M. Molines; Michael J. Bell
Ocean Science | 2016
Cataria Quam Cyrille Akuetevi; Bernard Barnier; Jacques Verron; J.-M. Molines; Albanne Lecointre
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
C. Heuzé; Frédéric Vivier; J. Le Sommer; J.-M. Molines; Thierry Penduff
Archive | 2006
Anne-Marie Treguier; J.-M. Molines; Gurvan Madec