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    Dynamics of Biweekly Oscillations in the Equatorial Indian Ocean

    Source: Journal of Physical Oceanography:;2006:;Volume( 036 ):;issue: 005::page 827
    Author:
    Miyama, Toru
    ,
    McCreary, Julian P.
    ,
    Sengupta, Debasis
    ,
    Senan, Retish
    DOI: 10.1175/JPO2897.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: Variability of the wind field over the equatorial Indian Ocean is spread throughout the intraseasonal (10?60 day) band. In contrast, variability of the near-surface ? field in the eastern, equatorial ocean is concentrated at biweekly frequencies and is largely composed of Yanai waves. The excitation of this biweekly variability is investigated using an oceanic GCM and both analytic and numerical versions of a linear, continuously stratified (LCS) model in which solutions are represented as expansions in baroclinic modes. Solutions are forced by Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) winds (the model control runs) and by idealized winds having the form of a propagating wave with frequency σ and wavenumber kw. The GCM and LCS control runs are remarkably similar in the biweekly band, indicating that the dynamics of biweekly variability are fundamentally linear and wind driven. The biweekly response is composed of local (nonradiating) and remote (Yanai wave) parts, with the former spread roughly uniformly along the equator and the latter strengthening to the east. Test runs to the numerical models separately forced by the τx and τy components of the QuikSCAT winds demonstrate that both forcings contribute to the biweekly signal, the response forced by τy being somewhat stronger. Without mixing, the analytic spectrum for Yanai waves forced by idealized winds has a narrowband (resonant) response for each baroclinic mode: Spectral peaks occur whenever the wavenumber of the Yanai wave for mode n is sufficiently close to kw and they shift from biweekly to lower frequencies with increasing modenumber n. With mixing, the higher-order modes are damped so that the largest ocean response is restricted to Yanai waves in the biweekly band. Thus, in the LCS model, resonance and mixing act together to account for the ocean's favoring the biweekly band. Because of the GCM's complexity, it cannot be confirmed that vertical mixing also damps its higher-order modes; other possible processes are nonlinear interactions with near-surface currents, and the model's low vertical resolution below the thermocline. Test runs to the LCS model show that Yanai waves from several modes superpose to form a beam (wave packet) that carries energy downward as well as eastward. Reflections of such beams from the near-surface pycnocline and bottom act to maintain near-surface energy levels, accounting for the eastward intensification of the near-surface, equatorial ? field in the control runs.
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      Dynamics of Biweekly Oscillations in the Equatorial Indian Ocean

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4225926
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    contributor authorMiyama, Toru
    contributor authorMcCreary, Julian P.
    contributor authorSengupta, Debasis
    contributor authorSenan, Retish
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:18:12Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:18:12Z
    date copyright2006/05/01
    date issued2006
    identifier issn0022-3670
    identifier otherams-82775.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4225926
    description abstractVariability of the wind field over the equatorial Indian Ocean is spread throughout the intraseasonal (10?60 day) band. In contrast, variability of the near-surface ? field in the eastern, equatorial ocean is concentrated at biweekly frequencies and is largely composed of Yanai waves. The excitation of this biweekly variability is investigated using an oceanic GCM and both analytic and numerical versions of a linear, continuously stratified (LCS) model in which solutions are represented as expansions in baroclinic modes. Solutions are forced by Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) winds (the model control runs) and by idealized winds having the form of a propagating wave with frequency σ and wavenumber kw. The GCM and LCS control runs are remarkably similar in the biweekly band, indicating that the dynamics of biweekly variability are fundamentally linear and wind driven. The biweekly response is composed of local (nonradiating) and remote (Yanai wave) parts, with the former spread roughly uniformly along the equator and the latter strengthening to the east. Test runs to the numerical models separately forced by the τx and τy components of the QuikSCAT winds demonstrate that both forcings contribute to the biweekly signal, the response forced by τy being somewhat stronger. Without mixing, the analytic spectrum for Yanai waves forced by idealized winds has a narrowband (resonant) response for each baroclinic mode: Spectral peaks occur whenever the wavenumber of the Yanai wave for mode n is sufficiently close to kw and they shift from biweekly to lower frequencies with increasing modenumber n. With mixing, the higher-order modes are damped so that the largest ocean response is restricted to Yanai waves in the biweekly band. Thus, in the LCS model, resonance and mixing act together to account for the ocean's favoring the biweekly band. Because of the GCM's complexity, it cannot be confirmed that vertical mixing also damps its higher-order modes; other possible processes are nonlinear interactions with near-surface currents, and the model's low vertical resolution below the thermocline. Test runs to the LCS model show that Yanai waves from several modes superpose to form a beam (wave packet) that carries energy downward as well as eastward. Reflections of such beams from the near-surface pycnocline and bottom act to maintain near-surface energy levels, accounting for the eastward intensification of the near-surface, equatorial ? field in the control runs.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleDynamics of Biweekly Oscillations in the Equatorial Indian Ocean
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume36
    journal issue5
    journal titleJournal of Physical Oceanography
    identifier doi10.1175/JPO2897.1
    journal fristpage827
    journal lastpage846
    treeJournal of Physical Oceanography:;2006:;Volume( 036 ):;issue: 005
    contenttypeFulltext
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