Internal Tide Transformation and Oceanic Internal Solitary Waves

Author(s):  
Peter Holloway ◽  
Efim Pelinovsky ◽  
Tatiana Talipova
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenhua Xu

<p>The interaction between the energetic internal waves in the Indonesian Seas and the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF) is not well known. Here we conduct a series of high-resolution numerical simulations surrounding the Lombok Strait, Indonesia, which is an important exit channel for the ITF, to explore the influences of the ITF on the spatiotemporal variations of M2 internal tides and associated internal solitary waves from the Strait. The ITF enhances the north-south asymmetry of internal tide propagation from the Lombok Strait, thus resulting in the spatial variability of northward and southward internal solitary waves. Interannual variability of internal tide generation and dissipation are due to ITF and air-sea freshwaterflux induced stratification variations associated with El Niño-Southern Oscillation. The local dissipation efficiency q exhibits substantial seasonal and interannual variations, which may provide effective feedback to the climate processes in the low-latitude equatorial oceans.</p>


Author(s):  
Yunchao Yang ◽  
Xiaodong Huang ◽  
Wei Zhao ◽  
Chun Zhou ◽  
Siwei Huang ◽  
...  

AbstractThe complex behaviors of internal solitary waves (ISWs) in the Andaman Sea were revealed using data collected over nearly 22-month-long observation period completed by two moorings. Emanating from the submarine ridges northwest of Sumatra Island and south of Car Nicobar, two types of ISWs, referred to as S- and C-ISWs, respectively, were identified in the measurements, and S-ISWs were generally found to be stronger than C-ISWs. The observed S- and C-ISWs frequently appeared as multi-wave packets, accounting for 87% and 43% of their observed episodes, respectively. The simultaneous measurements collected by the two moorings featured evident variability along the S-ISW crests, with the average wave amplitude in the northern portion being 36% larger than that in the southern portion. The analyses of the arrival times revealed that the S-ISWs in the northern portion occurred more frequently and arrived more irregularly than those in the southern portion. Moreover, the temporal variability of ISWs drastically differed on monthly and seasonal time scales, characterized by relatively stronger S-ISWs in spring and autumn. Over interannual time scale, the temporal variations in ISWs were generally subtle. The monthly-to-annual variations of ISWs could be mostly explained by the variability in stratification, which could be modulated by the monsoons, the winds in equatorial Indian Ocean and the mesoscale eddies in Andaman Sea. From careful analyses preformed based on the long-term measurements, we argued that the observed ISWs were likely generated via internal tide release mechanism and their generation processes were obviously modulated by background circulations.


2006 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Grimshaw ◽  
Efim Pelinovsky ◽  
Yury Stepanyants ◽  
Tatiana Talipova

The transformation of the non-linear internal tide and the consequent development of internal solitary waves on the Australian North West Shelf is studied numerically in the framework of the generalised rotation-modified Korteweg–de Vries equation. This model contains both non-linearity (quadratic and cubic), the Coriolis effect, depth variation and horizontal variability of the density stratification. The simulation results demonstrate that a wide variety of non-linear wave shapes can be explained by the synergetic action of non-linearity and the variability of the hydrology along the wave path.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
John A. Colosi ◽  
Nirnimesh Kumar ◽  
Sutara H. Suanda ◽  
Tucker M. Freismuth ◽  
Jamie H. MacMahan

AbstractMoored observations of temperature and current were collected on the inner continental shelf off Point Sal, California, between 9 June and 8 August 2015. The measurements consist of 10 moorings in total: 4 moorings each on the 50- and 30-m isobaths covering a 10-km along-shelf distance and an across-shelf section of moorings on the 50-, 40-, 30-, and 20-m isobaths covering a 5-km distance. Energetic, highly variable, and strongly dissipating transient wave events termed internal tide bores and internal solitary waves (ISWs) dominate the records. Simple models of the bore and ISW space–time behavior are implemented as a temperature match filter to detect events and estimate wave packet parameters as a function of time and mooring position. Wave-derived quantities include 1) group speed and direction; 2) time of arrival, time duration, vertical displacement amplitude, and waves per day; and 3) energy density, energy flux, and propagation loss. In total, over 1000 bore events and over 9000 ISW events were detected providing well-sampled statistical distributions. Statistics of the waves are rather insensitive to position along shelf but change markedly in the across-shelf direction. Two compelling results are 1) that the probability density functions for bore and ISW energy flux are nearly exponential, suggesting the importance of interference and 2) that wave propagation loss is proportional to energy flux, thus giving an exponential decay of energy flux toward shore with an e-folding scale of 2–2.4 km and average dissipation rates for bores and ISWs of 144 and 1.5 W m−1, respectively.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
João A. Lorenzzetti ◽  
Fabian G. Dias

We present an analysis of internal solitary waves (ISWs) on the SE Brazilian continental shelf using a set of Envisat/ASAR satellite images. For the 17-month observation period, 467 ISW packets were detected. Most of observed solitons were associated to 4–6 ms-1 wind. The number of ISW packets shows a seasonal signal with a peak in summer, with higher concentration in the outer shelf in all seasons, followed by midshelf during the summer. Propagation direction of ISWs was predominantly onshore with packets separated by typical M2 internal tide wavelengths (~10–40 km). The highest values of the barotropic tidal forcing F are concentrated at the shelf break between 200 and 500 m isobaths. These characteristics suggest that ISWs are formed from nonlinear disintegration of internal tides generated at the shelf break that propagate shoreward as interfacial internal waves. No significant change in the number of ISWs from spring to neap tides was observed in spite of significant tidal current variation (60%). Even not being a region of strong tides, this study shows that ISWs are a frequent and widespread feature, possibly playing a significant dynamic role, affecting biological production, sediment dispersion, and transport.


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