14 / 2023-07-23 14:54:20
Long-term Decreasing of Sea Level along Latitude of the Luzon Strait and its impact on the South China Sea: Surface VS Subsurface Forcing
sea level,mode water,subsurface forcing,eddy kinetic energy
Abstract Accepted
WU BAOLAN / The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
The sea level in the east of Luzon Strait along the latitudinal band (18-22N, 125-170E) demonstrates a unique decreasing trend during 1993-2020, with weakening of eddy kinetic energy (EKE), weaker Kuroshio transport and stronger looping pathway in the Luzon Strait. Neither the surface wind forcing (remote Rossby wave and local Ekman convergence/divergence) nor surface buoyancy forcing (heat flux and Ekman thermal advection) could explain the observed sea level and EKE decreasing trend. Here we propose that the reduction of mode water in the subsurface ocean contributes to the above changes during the past ~30 years. The mode water forms primarily in the mid-latitude and then propagates southwestward along the thermocline circulation, when it subducts into the subsurface ocean. It takes ~5 years for the mode water to arrive at the latitudinal band of Luzon Strait and affect the vertical stratification by changing the slope of thermocline. When the volume of mode water shrinks, the slope of the thermocline would flatten, making the upper thermocline lift along the Luzon Strait latitudinal band. Whereafter, the subtropical front weakens, reducing the vertical velocity shear between the surface eastward Subtropical Counter Current and subsurface westward North Equatorial Current and sea level due to the baroclinic adjustment. Besides, the flattened thermocline and weakened vertical velocity shear results in the EKE reduction, which will further contribute to the decreasing of sea level due to the weakened eddy-forcing.
Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Nov 02

    2023

    to

    Nov 06

    2023

  • Nov 01 2023

    Contribution Submission Deadline

  • Nov 20 2023

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Nov 05 2024

    Registration deadline

Sponsored By
Coastal Zones Under Intensifying Human Activities and Changing Climate: A
Regional Programme Integrating Science, Management and Society to Support
Ocean Sustainability (COASTAL-SOS)
Organized By
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University
College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University
China-ASEAN College of Marine Sciences, Xiamen University Malaysia
Supported By
COASTAL-SOS
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