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Propagation and reflection of long equatorial waves in the Indian Ocean from TOPEX/POSEIDON data during the 1993-1998 period

Propagation and reflection of long equatorial waves in the Indian Ocean from TOPEX/POSEIDON data during the 1993-1998 period
Propagation and reflection of long equatorial waves in the Indian Ocean from TOPEX/POSEIDON data during the 1993-1998 period
The present study offers a description of long equatorial wave propagation and reflection in the Indian Ocean as observed by the TOPEX/POSEIDON satellite. The equatorial longwave amplitudes are computed from January 1993 until December 1998, focusing on Kelvin (K) and first Rossby (R1) modes. The K wave is observed to propagate with a baroclinic phase speed close to 2?m/s while the R1 has a phase speed of 0.7?m/s. Wave reflections at both eastern and western boundaries are clearly observed during the entire period. At the eastern boundary K reflects into R1 with a reflection coefficient of 1.04 (reflection efficiency of 85% of that of an infinite meridional wall), and at the western boundary R1 reflects into K with a coefficient of 0.50 on average although a large seasonal and interannual variability of the reflection efficiency of the African coast is observed. Reflected K waves strongly influence the R1 variability near the western boundary as far as 60°E. Reflected R waves in turn, influence the K variability near the eastern boundary as far as 80°E. Although long equatorial waves are mainly forced by the changes in the winds during the inter-monsoon periods, reflection have a strong influence on the ocean's variability over a large part of the basin on both seasonal and interannual time scales. Focusing on the seasonal cycle of long equatorial waves (computed over 1993–1996), it is found that the constructive/destructive interaction between the wind forcing and wave reflection is responsible for the K (or R1) seasonal cycle to show a semi-annual (or annual) period near the western (or eastern) boundary. In 1994 and 1997–98, strong interannual easterlies coincident with El Niño onsets in the Pacific occurred in the Indian Ocean. Long equatorial wave propagation and reflection play a major role in creating an east–west sea level gradient along the equator, suggesting that wave dynamics and wave reflection may play a significant role in the Indian dipole mode suggested by several authors.
WOCE, WAVE PROPAGATION, WAVE REFLECTION, TOPEX-POSEIDON, KELVIN WAVES, PLANETARY WAVES, LONG WAVES, EL NINO
0930-7575
547-557
Le Blanc, J-L.
e5023b63-dfae-4db4-b7c5-a2898cf13d9c
Boulanger, J-P.
da140c38-f083-45a1-942b-a9489c12942e
Le Blanc, J-L.
e5023b63-dfae-4db4-b7c5-a2898cf13d9c
Boulanger, J-P.
da140c38-f083-45a1-942b-a9489c12942e

Le Blanc, J-L. and Boulanger, J-P. (2001) Propagation and reflection of long equatorial waves in the Indian Ocean from TOPEX/POSEIDON data during the 1993-1998 period. Climate Dynamics, 17 (7), 547-557. (doi:10.1007/s003820000128).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The present study offers a description of long equatorial wave propagation and reflection in the Indian Ocean as observed by the TOPEX/POSEIDON satellite. The equatorial longwave amplitudes are computed from January 1993 until December 1998, focusing on Kelvin (K) and first Rossby (R1) modes. The K wave is observed to propagate with a baroclinic phase speed close to 2?m/s while the R1 has a phase speed of 0.7?m/s. Wave reflections at both eastern and western boundaries are clearly observed during the entire period. At the eastern boundary K reflects into R1 with a reflection coefficient of 1.04 (reflection efficiency of 85% of that of an infinite meridional wall), and at the western boundary R1 reflects into K with a coefficient of 0.50 on average although a large seasonal and interannual variability of the reflection efficiency of the African coast is observed. Reflected K waves strongly influence the R1 variability near the western boundary as far as 60°E. Reflected R waves in turn, influence the K variability near the eastern boundary as far as 80°E. Although long equatorial waves are mainly forced by the changes in the winds during the inter-monsoon periods, reflection have a strong influence on the ocean's variability over a large part of the basin on both seasonal and interannual time scales. Focusing on the seasonal cycle of long equatorial waves (computed over 1993–1996), it is found that the constructive/destructive interaction between the wind forcing and wave reflection is responsible for the K (or R1) seasonal cycle to show a semi-annual (or annual) period near the western (or eastern) boundary. In 1994 and 1997–98, strong interannual easterlies coincident with El Niño onsets in the Pacific occurred in the Indian Ocean. Long equatorial wave propagation and reflection play a major role in creating an east–west sea level gradient along the equator, suggesting that wave dynamics and wave reflection may play a significant role in the Indian dipole mode suggested by several authors.

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More information

Published date: 2001
Keywords: WOCE, WAVE PROPAGATION, WAVE REFLECTION, TOPEX-POSEIDON, KELVIN WAVES, PLANETARY WAVES, LONG WAVES, EL NINO

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 7961
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/7961
ISSN: 0930-7575
PURE UUID: 2ba44f1c-c231-4770-bf35-8587ecf94800

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Date deposited: 13 Aug 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:50

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Author: J-L. Le Blanc
Author: J-P. Boulanger

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