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Effects of subsurface ocean dynamics on instability waves in the tropical Pacific
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Tropical instability waves in a primitive equation model of the tropical Pacific Ocean, forced with analyzed wind stresses updated daily, show unexpectedly close phase correspondence with observation through the latter half of 1992. This suggests that these waves are not pure instabilities developing from infinitesimal disturbances, but that their phases and phase speeds are at least partially determined by the wind stress forcing. To quantify and explain this observation, we perfomed several numerical experiments, which indicate that remotely forced Rossby waves can influence both the phase and phase speed of tropical instability waves. We suggest that a remote wind forcing determines the high model/observation phase correspondence of tropical instability waves through a relatively realistic simulation of equatorial Kelvin and Rossby wave activity.
- Subjects :
- Atmospheric Science
Ecology
Infragravity wave
Tropical instability waves
Rossby wave
Paleontology
Soil Science
Wind stress
Equatorial waves
Forestry
Geophysics
Aquatic Science
Oceanography
Ocean dynamics
Space and Planetary Science
Geochemistry and Petrology
Climatology
Wind wave
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
Gravity wave
Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
Geology
Earth-Surface Processes
Water Science and Technology
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....232e28e1a4cdbbb288b69a28accde23f