Biweekly mixed Rossby-gravity waves in the equatorial Indian Ocean
Abstract
This poster describes biweekly (defined as periods between 10 and 15 days) ocean variability in relation to equatorial wave theory using a comprehensive set of moored ocean current velocities as well as satellite-retrieved oceanic and atmospheric parameters in the Indian Ocean. Moored biweekly current velocities exhibit the meridional structure of mixed Rossby-gravity waves: Symmetric for meridional velocity and antisymmetric for zonal velocity around the equator with a decay scale of 228309 km. The biweekly meridional velocity along the equator has zonal and vertical wavelengths of approximately 3500 km and 750 m, respectively, with phase propagating westward at speeds of 2.83.1 m/s and upward at 5456 m/day. Conversely, wave energy is inferred to propagate eastward and downward. The range of best fit constants (1.42.0 m/s) that result from the linear separation of horizontal and vertical wave structures suggests the second baroclinic wave mode is dominant over other low baroclinic modes in accounting for the velocity variability. The biweekly waves are forced by surface winds; satellite-derived wind stress, sea level, and surface current anomalies, regressed against the first principal component of the biweekly moored velocities, illustrate the basin-scale structure and temporal evolution of the waves.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2021
- Bibcode:
- 2021AGUFMOS15D1001M