Hi Christian,
Thank you for your reply. Strong stratification occurs in the lakes when there is flood coming from the tributary rivers. The top 5m surface water of the lakes becomes mostly fresh after the flush while the bottom remain saline. At the mean time, salt is also pumped into the lakes beneath the fresh water through the entrance where it is connected to the ocean. After a few months the lakes would be well-mixed again. The largest temperature difference between the top and bottom water is less than 2 degrees Celsius. Unfortunately, we did not have the velocity profile in the lakes during the floods but we have the water levels at different locations calibrated to observed ones. So I assume that the model should well reproduce the hydrodynamics of the lakes. As far as I know, there is no barrage in the lakes. I tried to put a artificial one at the level of halocline and it just stops salt going upstream. We suspect that it might be caused by numerical diffusion. We were recommended by DHI that the classic version of MIKE3 might do a better job, so I am going to give that a go. Hopefully it can solve our problem. i will keep you posted.
Kind Regards
Yafei
[quote author=Christian Tomsu link=topic=1333.msg3332#msg3332 date=1358931650]
Hi Yafei,
do you have an explanation for this phenomenon in natural?
Do you know something of the depth dependent flow directions or flow velocities?
Do you know something about the depth dependent temperatures?
Or do you assume, that there is no flow in your estuarine lake? Is there a barrage or anything else?
Best regards, Christian
[/quote]