The formation and fate of internal waves in the South China Sea
Internal oceanic waves are subsurface gravity waves that can be enormous and travel thousands of kilometres before breaking but they are difficult to study; here observations of such waves in the South China Sea reveal their formation mechanism, extreme turbulence, relationship to the Kuroshio Curre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2015-05, Vol.521 (7550), p.65-69 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Internal oceanic waves are subsurface gravity waves that can be enormous and travel thousands of kilometres before breaking but they are difficult to study; here observations of such waves in the South China Sea reveal their formation mechanism, extreme turbulence, relationship to the Kuroshio Current and energy budget.
IWISE catches internal waves mid-ocean
Internal waves are the underwater version of more familiar surface waves. They can be enormous and travel thousands of kilometres before breaking. The South China Sea is known to be home to the largest internal waves in the world's oceans, but their size, generation mechanisms and role in the regional energy budget are unknown. Matthew Alford and colleagues now present the results from the IWISE observational campaign and reveal that internal waves more than 200 metres high break in the South China Sea and create turbulence that is orders of magnitude larger than in the open ocean, and that wave formation is influenced by the Kuroshio current. These results now allow for a complete energy budget of the South China Sea, and for a more accurate incorporation of internal waves into climate models.
Internal gravity waves, the subsurface analogue of the familiar surface gravity waves that break on beaches, are ubiquitous in the ocean. Because of their strong vertical and horizontal currents, and the turbulent mixing caused by their breaking, they affect a panoply of ocean processes, such as the supply of nutrients for photosynthesis
1
, sediment and pollutant transport
2
and acoustic transmission
3
; they also pose hazards for man-made structures in the ocean
4
. Generated primarily by the wind and the tides, internal waves can travel thousands of kilometres from their sources before breaking
5
, making it challenging to observe them and to include them in numerical climate models, which are sensitive to their effects
6
,
7
. For over a decade, studies
8
,
9
,
10
,
11
have targeted the South China Sea, where the oceans’ most powerful known internal waves are generated in the Luzon Strait and steepen dramatically as they propagate west. Confusion has persisted regarding their mechanism of generation, variability and energy budget, however, owing to the lack of
in situ
data from the Luzon Strait, where extreme flow conditions make measurements difficult. Here we use new observations and numerical models to (1) show that the waves begin as sinusoidal disturbances rather than arising from sharp hydraulic phenom |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nature14399 |