EGU21-8326, updated on 17 Oct 2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8326
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Deep-mixing and deep-cooling events in Lake Garda: Simulation and Mechanisms

Bouke Biemond1, Marina Amadori2,3, Marco Toffolon2, Sebastiano Piccolroaz4, Hans van Haren5, and Henk Dijkstra1
Bouke Biemond et al.
  • 1Institute for Marine and Atmospheric research Utrecht, Department of Physics, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands
  • 2Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, University of Trento, Trento, Italy
  • 3Institute for Electromagnetic Sensing of the Environment, National Research Council, Milan, Italy
  • 4Physics of Aquatic Systems Laboratory (APHYS) - Margaretha Kamprad Chair, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
  • 5Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ) and Utrecht University, the Netherlands

A calibrated three-dimensional numerical model (Delft3D) and in-situ observations are used to study the relation between deep water temperature and mixing in Lake Garda (Italy). A model-observation comparison indicates that the model is able to adequately capture the production of turbulent kinetic energy in the surface layer and its vertical propagation during unstratified conditions. Here, the model is used as a support to identify the main processes causing deep water cooling and deep mixing in the lake. The analysis indicated that two processes cause mixing over the entire depth. The first process is thermocline tilting due to strong and persistent winds. This is found to generate a temporary disappearance of stratification followed by vertical mixing over the entire depth. The second process is turbulent cooling, which arises as a combination of negative-buoyancy produced by surface cooling and turbulence injection from strong winds. Turbulent cooling acts when vertical temperature gradients are absent over the whole depth and cools and mixes the lake over its entire vertical. The third identified process is associated to differential cooling between the shallow southern part and the deep northern trunk. This generates the advection of cold water from the southern, colder and well-mixed basin to the norther trunk along the sloping bottom of the lake. Such differential cooling is found to be a consequence of the turbulent cooling and is not associated with mixing over the entire depth in the northern trunk. Available observations indicate that the three processes identified from the model indeed occur in Lake Garda. Long- term simulations of deep water temperature and related deep mixing appear to be very sensitive to the atmospheric forcing, whose accurate reproduction is essential for the prediction of the future occurrence of deep mixing events.

How to cite: Biemond, B., Amadori, M., Toffolon, M., Piccolroaz, S., van Haren, H., and Dijkstra, H.: Deep-mixing and deep-cooling events in Lake Garda: Simulation and Mechanisms, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8326, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8326, 2021.

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