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Buoyancy Effect on the Winter South China Sea Western Boundary Current
Author(s) -
Yan Yunwei,
Wang Guihua,
Xue Huijie,
Chai Fei
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1029/2019jc015079
Subject(s) - pycnocline , buoyancy , climatology , advection , forcing (mathematics) , oceanography , geology , thermal wind , environmental science , geostrophic wind , boundary current , current (fluid) , drifter , wind speed , ocean current , atmospheric sciences , wind shear , physics , quantum mechanics , lagrangian , mathematical physics , thermodynamics
Abstract The month‐to‐month variation of the winter South China Sea (SCS) western boundary current (WBC) along the western slope is examined using drifter observations, satellite altimetry data, and an ocean reanalysis. The most surprising phenomenon is that the WBC velocity at the sea surface reaches the maxima in November–December, which cannot be explained by wind forcing and Kuroshio intrusion alone. Analysis results demonstrate that buoyancy effect should be considered to explain the month‐to‐month variation besides wind‐Kuroshio effects. In winter, cold‐and‐salty advection by the WBC from the north decreases/reverses the zonal density gradient in the seasonal pycnocline induced by wind forcing and Kuroshio intrusion and therefore weakens wind‐Kuroshio‐induced WBC. Buoyancy effect on the winter SCS WBC is opposite to wind‐Kuroshio effects. In addition, buoyancy effect reaches the maximum in January, which is concurrent with wind‐Kuroshio effects. As a result of their competition, the zonal density gradient in the seasonal pycnocline is maximum in November–December, resulting in the maximum surface velocity along the western slope occurring in November‐December. This study demonstrates the importance of buoyancy forcing to the winter SCS WBC.