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    The Breaking and Scattering of the Internal Tide on a Continental Slope

    Source: Journal of Physical Oceanography:;2011:;Volume( 041 ):;issue: 005::page 926
    Author:
    Klymak, Jody M.
    ,
    Alford, Matthew H.
    ,
    Pinkel, Robert
    ,
    Lien, Ren-Chieh
    ,
    Yang, Yung Jang
    ,
    Tang, Tswen-Yung
    DOI: 10.1175/2010JPO4500.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: strong internal tide is generated in the Luzon Strait that radiates westward to impact the continental shelf of the South China Sea. Mooring data in 1500-m depth on the continental slope show a fortnightly averaged incoming tidal flux of 12 kW m?1, and a mooring on a broad plateau on the slope finds a similar flux as an upper bound. Of this, 5.5 kW m?1 is in the diurnal tide and 3.5 kW m?1 is in the semidiurnal tide, with the remainder in higher-frequency motions. Turbulence dissipation may be as high as 3 kW m?1. Local generation is estimated from a linear model to be less than 1 kW m?1. The continental slope is supercritical with respect to the diurnal tide, implying that there may be significant back reflection into the basin. Comparing the low-mode energy of a horizontal standing wave at the mooring to the energy flux indicates that perhaps one-third of the incoming diurnal tidal energy is reflected. Conversely, the slope is subcritical with respect to the semidiurnal tide, and the observed reflection is very weak. A surprising observation is that, despite significant diurnal vertical-mode-2 incident energy flux, this energy did not reflect; most of the reflection was in mode 1.The observations are consistent with a linear scattering model for supercritical topography. Large fractions of incoming energy can reflect depending on both the geometry of the shelfbreak and the phase between the modal components of the incoming flux. If the incident mode-1 and mode-2 waves are in phase at the shelf break, there is substantial transmission onto the shelf; if they are out of phase, there is almost 100% reflection. The observations of the diurnal tide at the site are consistent with the first case: weak reflection, with most of it in mode 1 and almost no reflection in mode 2. The sensitivity of the reflection on the phase between incident components significantly complicates the prediction of reflections from continental shelves.Finally, a somewhat incidental observation is that the shape of the continental slope has large regions that are near critical to the dominant diurnal tide. This implicates the internal tide in shaping of the continental slope.
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      The Breaking and Scattering of the Internal Tide on a Continental Slope

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    contributor authorKlymak, Jody M.
    contributor authorAlford, Matthew H.
    contributor authorPinkel, Robert
    contributor authorLien, Ren-Chieh
    contributor authorYang, Yung Jang
    contributor authorTang, Tswen-Yung
    date accessioned2017-06-09T16:37:05Z
    date available2017-06-09T16:37:05Z
    date copyright2011/05/01
    date issued2011
    identifier issn0022-3670
    identifier otherams-71024.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4212871
    description abstractstrong internal tide is generated in the Luzon Strait that radiates westward to impact the continental shelf of the South China Sea. Mooring data in 1500-m depth on the continental slope show a fortnightly averaged incoming tidal flux of 12 kW m?1, and a mooring on a broad plateau on the slope finds a similar flux as an upper bound. Of this, 5.5 kW m?1 is in the diurnal tide and 3.5 kW m?1 is in the semidiurnal tide, with the remainder in higher-frequency motions. Turbulence dissipation may be as high as 3 kW m?1. Local generation is estimated from a linear model to be less than 1 kW m?1. The continental slope is supercritical with respect to the diurnal tide, implying that there may be significant back reflection into the basin. Comparing the low-mode energy of a horizontal standing wave at the mooring to the energy flux indicates that perhaps one-third of the incoming diurnal tidal energy is reflected. Conversely, the slope is subcritical with respect to the semidiurnal tide, and the observed reflection is very weak. A surprising observation is that, despite significant diurnal vertical-mode-2 incident energy flux, this energy did not reflect; most of the reflection was in mode 1.The observations are consistent with a linear scattering model for supercritical topography. Large fractions of incoming energy can reflect depending on both the geometry of the shelfbreak and the phase between the modal components of the incoming flux. If the incident mode-1 and mode-2 waves are in phase at the shelf break, there is substantial transmission onto the shelf; if they are out of phase, there is almost 100% reflection. The observations of the diurnal tide at the site are consistent with the first case: weak reflection, with most of it in mode 1 and almost no reflection in mode 2. The sensitivity of the reflection on the phase between incident components significantly complicates the prediction of reflections from continental shelves.Finally, a somewhat incidental observation is that the shape of the continental slope has large regions that are near critical to the dominant diurnal tide. This implicates the internal tide in shaping of the continental slope.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleThe Breaking and Scattering of the Internal Tide on a Continental Slope
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume41
    journal issue5
    journal titleJournal of Physical Oceanography
    identifier doi10.1175/2010JPO4500.1
    journal fristpage926
    journal lastpage945
    treeJournal of Physical Oceanography:;2011:;Volume( 041 ):;issue: 005
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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