Tides and their dynamics over the sunda shelf of the southern South China sea

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Abstract

A three-dimensional Regional Ocean Modelling System is used to study the tidal characteristics and their dynamics in the Sunda Shelf of the southern South China Sea. In this model, the outer domain is set with a 25 km resolution and the inner one, with a 9 km resolution. Calculations are performed on the inner domain. The model is forced at the sea surface by climatological monthly mean wind stress, freshwater (evaporation minus precipitation), and heat fluxes. Momentum and tracers (such as temperature and salinity) are prescribed in addition to the tidal heights and currents extracted from the Oregon State University TOPEX/Poseidon Global Inverse Solution (TPXO7.2) at the open boundaries. The results are validated against observed tidal amplitudes and phases at 19 locations. Results show that the mean average power energy spectrum (in unit m2/s/cph) for diurnal tides at the southern end of the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia is approximately 43% greater than that in the East Malaysia region located in northern Borneo. In contrast, for the region of northern Borneo the semidiurnal power energy spectrum is approximately 25% greater than that in the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia. This implies that diurnal tides are dominant along the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia while both diurnal and semidiurnal tides dominate almost equally in coastal East Malaysia. Furthermore, the diurnal tidal energy flux is found to be 60% greater than that of the semidiurnal tides in the southern South China Sea. Based on these model analyses, the significant tidal mixing frontal areas are located primarily off Sarawak coast as indicated by high chlorophyll-A concentrations in the area.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Bathymetry in (a) the coarse resolution and (b) the fine resolution domains of the two-domain nested model. The boundary of the nested domain is presented as a black box in (a). The numbers in yellow squares indicate the tidal stations (see Table 2 for station identifications), where the tidal harmonic constants are available for model verification. The dashed line marked with T1 at (b) indicates the pathway between the mouth of SSCS and the Java Sea, transect of A1A2 is used to evaluate the bi-monthly (January-February) variations of density and nutrients (such as phosphate) in the water column. (c) Bathymetry of the Strait of Malacca is marked by the dashed line T2 at the head of the Strait to estimate the resonance frequency.
  • Table 1. RMSE differences in terms of amplitude and phase from global inverse tide model (TPXO7.2) and ROMS (outer and inner domains) computed with respect to those from tidal gauges.
  • Fig 2. (a-c) Averaged annual potential density (kg/m3), and (d-f) buoyancy frequency (Hz) in different selected latitudes of the SSCS.
  • Fig 3. Observed (TGs) and simulated sea surface elevations (m) at (a) Chendering (Station 13), (b) Tioman Island (Station 15), (c) Kota Kinabalu (Station 17), and (d) Labuan (Station 19), averaged from January to March. The blue and red lines denote simulation and observation respectively.
  • Table 2. M2 and K1 amplitudes and phases for the 19 stations of TGs and those simulated from the ROMS.
  • Table 3. Same as Table 2, but for S2 and O1.
  • Fig 4. Linear regression with 95% confidence intervals for (a-b) tidal amplitude (cm) and (c-d) phase (in LT degrees) of semidiurnal tidal constituents (M2 and S2) between 19 tide gauges and estimated from the simulated model.
  • Fig 5. Same as Fig 2, but for diurnal tidal constituents (K1 and O1).

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APA

Daryabor, F., Ooi, S. H., Samah, A. A., & Akbari, A. (2016). Tides and their dynamics over the sunda shelf of the southern South China sea. PLoS ONE, 11(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162170

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