Abstract
Intraseasonal fluctuation with periods of ∼90 days in the South China Sea (SCS) basin is investigated based on an array of seven subsurface moorings. In the deep layer, the 90-day fluctuation is revealed to contribute significantly to the variability in the current, accounting for ∼69% of the subinertial variance. This fluctuation propagates westward along the mooring section with a phase speed of ∼4.6 cm s21. In the upper layer, the fluctuation also propagates westward with a similar phase speed, but with opposite phase to that of the deep layer. These results suggest that the 90-day fluctuation regulating the abyssal SCS should be the first mode baroclinic Rossby wave. A set of experiments based on a two-layer dynamic model reveal that both the local wind stress curl and the flow originating from the North Pacific through the Luzon Strait contribute to drive the 90-day fluctuation in the deep SCS, while the latter plays the dominant role.
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CITATION STYLE
Xu, Q., Zhou, C., Zhao, W., Hu, Q., Xiao, X., Zhang, D., … Tian, J. (2022). Dynamics of the Baroclinic Rossby Waves Regulating the Abyssal South China Sea. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 52(5), 873–887. https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-21-0207.1
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