scholarly journals Observations of Large-Amplitude Nonlinear Internal Waves from a Drifting Array: Instruments and Methods

2010 ◽  
Vol 27 (10) ◽  
pp. 1711-1731 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. R. Centurioni

Abstract This paper presents a novel methodology applied to the observation of large-amplitude nonlinear internal waves in the upper ocean from an array of drifting instruments. The characteristics of the instrument used—an Autonomous Drifting Ocean Station with acoustic current profilers (ADOS-A), which is a drifting buoy with a 200-m-long thermistor chain, several profiling acoustic current meters, and a GPS—are discussed. The ADOS-A is lightweight and relatively inexpensive and can be deployed from aircrafts or from ships of opportunity. Three packets of large-amplitude, nonlinear internal waves were observed in the South China Sea. The speed and the direction of propagation of the waves are accurately determined and their characteristics and evolution over space and time scales comparable with those of the waves, as they propagate through the array, are discussed.

2008 ◽  
Vol 123 (5) ◽  
pp. 3588-3588 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chingsang Chiu ◽  
D. Benjamin Reeder ◽  
Christopher Miller ◽  
Justin Reeves ◽  
Steve Ramp ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 124 (12) ◽  
pp. 8949-8968 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhigang Lai ◽  
Guangzhen Jin ◽  
Yongmao Huang ◽  
Haiyun Chen ◽  
Xiaodong Shang ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1338-1355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew H. Alford ◽  
Ren-Chieh Lien ◽  
Harper Simmons ◽  
Jody Klymak ◽  
Steve Ramp ◽  
...  

Abstract In the South China Sea (SCS), 14 nonlinear internal waves are detected as they transit a synchronous array of 10 moorings spanning the waves’ generation site at Luzon Strait, through the deep basin, and onto the upper continental slope 560 km to the west. Their arrival time, speed, width, energy, amplitude, and number of trailing waves are monitored. Waves occur twice daily in a particular pattern where larger, narrower “A” waves alternate with wider, smaller “B” waves. Waves begin as broad internal tides close to Luzon Strait’s two ridges, steepening to O(3–10 km) wide in the deep basin and O(200–300 m) on the upper slope. Nearly all waves eventually develop wave trains, with larger–steeper waves developing them earlier and in greater numbers. The B waves in the deep basin begin at a mean speed of ≈5% greater than the linear mode-1 phase speed for semidiurnal internal waves (computed using climatological and in situ stratification). The A waves travel ≈5%–10% faster than B waves until they reach the continental slope, presumably because of their greater amplitude. On the upper continental slope, all waves speed up relative to linear values, but B waves now travel 8%–12% faster than A waves, in spite of being smaller. Solutions of the Taylor–Goldstein equation with observed currents demonstrate that the B waves’ faster speed is a result of modulation of the background currents by an energetic diurnal internal tide on the upper slope. Attempts to ascertain the phase of the barotropic tide at which the waves were generated yielded inconsistent results, possibly partly because of contamination at the easternmost mooring by eastward signals generated at Luzon Strait’s western ridge. These results present a coherent picture of the transbasin evolution of the waves but underscore the need to better understand their generation, the nature of their nonlinearity, and propagation through a time-variable background flow, which includes the internal tides.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oxana Kurkina ◽  
Tatyana Talipova ◽  
Tarmo Soomere ◽  
Ayrat Giniyatullin ◽  
Andrey Kurkin

Abstract. Spatial distributions of the main properties of the mode function and kinematic and nonlinear parameters of internal waves of the second mode are derived for the South China Sea for typical summer conditions in July. The calculations are based on the Generalized Digital Environmental Model (GDEM) climatology of hydrological variables. The focus is on the phase speed of long internal waves and the coefficients at the dispersive, quadratic and cubic terms of the weakly nonlinear Gardner model. Spatial distributions of these parameters, except for the coefficient at the cubic term, are qualitatively similar for waves of both modes. The dispersive term of Gardner equation and phase speed for internal waves of the second mode are about a quarter and half, respectively, of those for waves of the first mode. Similarly to the waves of the first mode, the coefficients at the quadratic and cubic terms of Gardner equation are practically independent of water depth. In contrast to the waves of the first mode, for waves of the second mode the quadratic term is mostly negative. The results can serve as a basis for express estimates of the expected parameters of internal waves for the South China Sea.


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