Publication | Open Access
Regional Dynamics of Seasonal Variability in the South China Sea
177
Citations
18
References
2001
Year
ClimatologyMeteorologySea-level ChangeOcean DynamicsEngineeringPhysical OceanographyGeographySouth China SeaScs BasinRegional DynamicsOceanic ForcingOceanographyCryosphereSea Surface HeightEarth ScienceClimate DynamicsClimate Variability
Dynamics of the seasonal cycle of sea surface height (SSH) in the South China Sea (SCS) are studied using observations as well as numerical and theoretical models. Seasonal variability of the SCS is interpreted in light of large-scale dynamics and Rossby waves. It is found that the seasonal cycle over most of the SCS basin is determined predominantly by the regional ocean dynamics within the SCS. The SSH variability is shown to be forced mainly by surface wind curl on baroclinic Rossby waves. Annual baroclinic Rossby waves cross the basin in less than a few months, leaving the upper ocean in a quasi-steady Sverdrup balance. An anomalous cyclonic (anticyclonic) gyre is generated in winter (summer) by the anomalous cyclonic (anticyclonic) wind curl that is associated with the northeasterly (southwesterly) monsoon. In addition, surface heat flux acts to enhance the wind-generated variability. The winter surface cooling (warming) cools (warms) the mixed layer especially in the central SCS, reducing (increasing) the SSH.
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