zonal current
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2021 ◽  
Vol 925 (1) ◽  
pp. 012007
Author(s):  
P A Utari

Abstract The evolution of Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) events in 2006 and 2010 is investigated using observational data products that are made to understand several processes in the positive (negative) phase of IOD events. Two Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler (ADCP) moorings mounted at 90°E and 80.5°E along the equator were used to evaluate the zonal current variation during two contrasting Indian Ocean Dipole (IO) events. Westward anomalies of the zonal current were observed at 0°, 80.5°E during the peak phase of the positive IOD event from October to December 2006. Meanwhile, the observed zonal currents at 0°, 90°E only showed the short-term westward anomalies during October 2006. On the other hand, during the negative IOD event in 2010, the observed zonal current at both mooring locations indicated strong intraseasonal variations of the eastward anomalies from August to December 2010. Strong easterly (westerly) anomalies of the surface zonal winds were observed during the peak phase of the positive (negative) IOD event in 2006 (2010). These easterly (westerly) anomalies forced upwelling (downwelling) equatorial Kelvin waves indicated by the negative (positive) sea surface height anomalies. Strengthening (weakening) of upwelling (downwelling) along the equatorial Indian Ocean would be a significant factor for further understanding of IOD evolution.


2021 ◽  
Vol 87 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shizhao Wei ◽  
Tao Wang ◽  
Ningfei Chen ◽  
Zhiyong Qiu

General nonlinear equations describing reversed shear Alfvén eigenmode (RSAE) self-modulation via zero-frequency zonal structure (ZFZS) generation are derived using nonlinear gyrokinetic theory, which are then applied to study the spontaneous ZFZS excitation as well as RSAE nonlinear saturation. It is found that both electrostatic zonal flow and electromagnetic zonal current can be preferentially excited by finite-amplitude RSAE, depending on specific plasma parameters. The modification to local shear Alfvén wave continuum is evaluated using the derived saturation level of zonal current, which is shown to play a comparable role in saturating RSAE with the ZFZS scattering.


Ocean Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 1115-1140
Author(s):  
Nining Sari Ningsih ◽  
Sholihati Lathifa Sakina ◽  
Raden Dwi Susanto ◽  
Farrah Hanifah

Abstract. Detailed ocean currents in the southeastern tropical Indian Ocean adjacent to southern Sumatran and Javan coasts have not been fully explained because of limited observations. In this study, zonal current characteristics in the region have been studied using simulation results of a 1/8∘ global hybrid coordinate ocean model from 1950 to 2013. The simulated zonal currents across three meridional sections were then investigated using an empirical orthogonal function (EOF), where the first three modes account for 75 %–98 % of the total variance. The first temporal mode of EOF is then investigated using ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD) to distinguish the signals. This study has revealed distinctive features of currents in the South Java Current (SJC) region, the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF)–South Equatorial Current (SEC) region, and the transition zone between these regions. The vertical structures of zonal currents in southern Java and offshore Sumatra are characterized by a one-layer flow. Conversely, a two-layer flow is observed in the nearshore and transition regions of Sumatra. Current variation in the SJC region has peak energies that are sequentially dominated by semiannual, intraseasonal, and annual timescales. Meanwhile, the transition zone is characterized by semiannual and intraseasonal periods with pronounced interannual variations. In contrast, interannual variability associated with El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) modulates the prominent intraseasonal variability of current in the ITF–SEC region. ENSO has the strongest influence at the outflow ITF, while the IOD's strongest influence is in southwestern Sumatra, with the ENSO (IOD) leading the current by 4 months (1 month). Moreover, the contributions (largest to smallest) of each EEMD mode at the nearshore of Java and offshore Sumatra are intraseasonal, semiannual, annual, interannual, and long-term fluctuations. The contribution of long-term variation (19.2 %) in the far offshore eastern Indian Ocean is larger than the interannual (16.3 %) and annual (14.7 %) variations. Future studies should be conducted to investigate this long-term variation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin Burmeister ◽  
Franziska U. Schwarzkopf ◽  
Arne Biastoch ◽  
Peter Brandt ◽  
Joke F. Lübbecke ◽  
...  

<p>The upper wind-driven circulation in the tropical Atlantic plays a key role in the basin wide distribution of water mass properties and affects the transport of heat, freshwater, and biogeochemical components like oxygen or nutrients. It is an important component of the Atlantic climate system and the marine ecosystems. Hence, it is crucial to improve our understanding of its long-term variability which largely relies on model simulations due to sparse observational data coverage in earlier periods. In this study the impact of two different wind forcing products on the tropical Atlantic zonal current field is studied in a high-resolution ocean general circulation model. The first forcing product is the Coordinated Ocean-Ice Reference Experiments (CORE) v2 dataset covering the period 1948 to 2009 (Griffies et al., 2009). It has a horizontal resolution of 2°x2° and temporal resolution of 6-hours. The second forcing product is the new JRA55-do surface dataset (Tsujino et al., 2018). This dataset stands out due to its high horizontal (~55 km) and temporal resolution (3 h) which now covers the entire observational period (1958 to present).</p><p>While CORE simulations had difficulties to realistically simulate off-equatorial zonal currents in the tropical Atlantic, in model simulations forced with JRA55-do preliminary results show a clearly improved structure of the equatorial current system. In this study, the used CORE simulation tends to overestimate the strength and vertical extend of the zonal currents especially north of the equator compared to the here used JRA55-do simulation and observations. This might be due to the low resolution of the CORE forcing which cannot resolve smaller scale wind stress and wind stress curl structures.</p><p>Furthermore, the CORE wind forcing exhibit suspicious multidecadal wind variability (He et al., 2016) which presumable impacts the multidecadal variability of the simulated wind-driven circulation in the tropical Atlantic. Here, largest differences of zonal wind stress anomalies (up to ~0.03 N m<sup>-2</sup>) between both forcing products occur north of the equator between 30°-10°W before 1990. CORE shows stronger eastward wind stress anomalies between 1958 and 1970 and stronger westward wind stress anomalies between 1970 and 1990. How this impacts the variability of the equatorial current system is investigated in this study.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (6) ◽  
pp. 1159-1170
Author(s):  
Masatoshi Yamauchi ◽  
Magnar G. Johnsen ◽  
Carl-Fredrik Enell ◽  
Anders Tjulin ◽  
Anna Willer ◽  
...  

Abstract. A solar-flare-induced, high-latitude (peak at 70–75∘ geographic latitude – GGlat) ionospheric current system was studied. Right after the X9.3 flare on 6 September 2017, magnetic stations at 68–77∘ GGlat near local noon detected northward geomagnetic deviations (ΔB) for more than 3 h, with peak amplitudes of >200 nT without any accompanying substorm activities. From its location, this solar flare effect, or crochet, is different from previously studied ones, namely, the subsolar crochet (seen at lower latitudes), auroral crochet (pre-requires auroral electrojet in sunlight), or cusp crochet (seen only in the cusp). The new crochet is much more intense and longer in duration than the subsolar crochet. The long duration matches with the period of high solar X-ray flux (more than M3-class flare level). Unlike the cusp crochet, the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) BY is not the driver, with the BY values of only 0–1 nT out of a 3 nT total field. The equivalent ionospheric current flows eastward in a limited latitude range but extended at least 8 h in local time (LT), forming a zonal current region equatorward of the polar cap on the geomagnetic closed region. EISCAT radar measurements, which were conducted over the same region as the most intense ΔB, show enhancements of electron density (and hence of ion-neutral density ratio) at these altitudes (∼100 km) at which strong background ion convection (>100 m s−1) pre-existed in the direction of tidal-driven diurnal solar quiet (Sq0) flow. Therefore, this new zonal current can be related to this Sq0-like convection and the electron density enhancement, for example, by descending the E-region height. However, we have not found why the new crochet is found in a limited latitudinal range, and therefore, the mechanism is still unclear compared to the subsolar crochet that is maintained by a transient redistribution of the electron density. The signature is sometimes seen in the auroral electrojet (AE = AU − AL) index. A quick survey for X-class flares during solar cycle 23 and 24 shows clear increases in AU for about half the > X2 flares during non-substorm time, despite the unfavourable latitudinal coverage of the AE stations for detecting this new crochet. Although some of these AU increases could be the auroral crochet signature, the high-latitude crochet can be a rather common feature for X flares. We found a new type of the solar flare effect on the dayside ionospheric current at high latitudes but equatorward of the cusp during quiet periods. The effect is also seen in the AU index for nearly half of the > X2-class solar flares. A case study suggests that the new crochet is related to the Sq0 (tidal-driven part) current.


2020 ◽  
Vol 549 ◽  
pp. 116496
Author(s):  
Melanie K. Behrens ◽  
Katharina Pahnke ◽  
Sophie Cravatte ◽  
Frédéric Marin ◽  
Catherine Jeandel

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nining Sari Ningsih ◽  
Sholihati Lathifa Sakina ◽  
Raden Dwi Susanto ◽  
Farrah Hanifah

Abstract. Zonal current characteristics in the Southeastern Tropical Indian Ocean (SETIO) adjacent to the southern Sumatra-Java coasts have been studied using 64 years (1950–2013) data derived from simulated results of a 1/8° global version of the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM). This study has revealed distinctive features of zonal currents in the South Java Current (SJC) region, the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF)/South Equatorial Current (SEC) region, and the transition zone between the SJC and ITF/SEC regions. Empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis is applied to investigate explained variance of the current data and give results for almost 95–98 % of total variance. The first temporal mode of EOF is then investigated by using ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD) for distinguishing the signals. The EEMD analysis shows that zonal currents in the SETIO vary considerably from intraseasonal to interannual timescales. In the SJC region, the zonal currents are consecutively dominated by semiannual (0.140 power/year), intraseasonal (0.070 power/year), and annual (0.038 power/year) signals, while semiannual (0.135 power/year) and intraseasonal (0.033 power/year) signals with pronounced interannual variations (0.012 power/year) of current appear consecutively to be dominant modes of variability in the transition zone between the SJC and ITF/SEC regions. In contrast, there exist dominant interannual signal (0.017 power/year) with prominent intraseasonal variability (0.012 power/year) of the current in the ITF/SEC region. In response to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event, El Niño (La Niña) events are favourable for an eastward (westward) zonal current. Meanwhile, an eastward (westward) anomaly of the current exists during negative (positive) Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), which is associated with the presence of anomalous surface winds over the study area during those events. This work may contribute to further understanding of the variability of zonal current characteristics in the SETIO both in space and time as well as identification of its dominant time scales.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masatoshi Yamauchi ◽  
Magnar G. Johnsen ◽  
Carl-Fredrik Enell ◽  
Anders Tjulin ◽  
Anna Willer ◽  
...  

Abstract. Solar flare-induced High latitude (peak at 70–75° geographic latitude) ionospheric current system was studied. Right after the X9.3 flare on 6 September 2017, magnetic stations at 68–77° geographic latitudes (GGlat) near local noon detected northward geomagnetic deviations (ΔB) for more than 3 hours, with peak amplitudes > 200 nT, without any accompanying substorm activities. From its location, this solar flare effect, or crochet, is different from previously studied ones, namely, subsolar crochet (seen at lower latitude), auroral crochet (pre-requires auroral electrojet in sunlight), or cusp crochet (seen only in the cusp). The new crochet is much more intense and longer in duration than the subsolar crochet. The long duration matches with the period of high solar X-ray flux (more than M3-class flare level). Unlike the cusp crochet, interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) BY is not the driver with BY only 0–1 nT out of 3 nT total field. The equivalent ionospheric current flows eastward in a limited latitude range but extended at least 8 hours in local time (LT), forming a zonal current region equatorward of the polar cap on the geomagnetic closed region. EISCAT radar measurements over the same region as the most intense ΔB near local noon show enhancements of electron density (and hence ion-neutral ratio) at these altitudes (~ 100 km) where the background Sq ion convection (> 100 m/s) pre-existed. Therefore, this new zonal current can be related to the Sq convection and the electron density enhancement, e.g., by descending E-region height. However, we have not found why the new crochet is found in a limited latitudinal range, and therefore the mechanism is still unclear compared to the subsolar crochet that is maintained by transient re-distribution of electron density. The signature is sometimes seen in the Auroral Electrojet (AE) index. A quick eye-survey for X-class flares during solar cycle 23 and 24 shows clear AU increases for about half the > X2 flares during non-substorm time, although the latitudinal coverage of the AE stations is not favorable to detect this new crochet. Although some of them could be due to auroral crochet, this new crochet can be rather common feature for X flares.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
YunLong Shi ◽  
DeZhou Yang ◽  
XingRu Feng ◽  
JiFeng Qi ◽  
HongWei Yang ◽  
...  
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