Wind and Heat Forcings of the Seasonal and Interannual Sea Level Variabilities in the Southwest Pacific

Author:

Yang Lina123ORCID,Zhao Xinyang1,Liang Peng123,Zhang Tianyu123,Xie Lingling123,Murtugudde Raghu45

Affiliation:

1. a Laboratory for Coastal Ocean Variation and Disaster Prediction, College of Ocean and Meteorology, Guangdong Ocean University, Zhanjiang, China

2. b Key Laboratory of Climate, Resources and Environment in Continental Shelf Sea and Deep Sea of Department of Education of Guangdong Province, Zhanjiang, China

3. c Key Laboratory of Space Ocean Remote Sensing and Application, Ministry of Natural Resources, Beijing, China

4. d Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, University of Maryland, College Park, College Park, Maryland

5. e Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai, India

Abstract

Abstract Sea level variabilities in the southwest Pacific contribute to the variations of equatorial current bifurcation and the Indonesian Throughflow transport. These processes are closely related to the recharge/discharge of equatorial heat content and dynamic distribution of anthropogenic ocean heating over the Indo-Pacific basin, thus being of profound significance for climate variability and change. Here we identify the major features of seasonal and interannual sea level variabilities in this region, confirming the dominance of the first baroclinic mode in the tropics (contributing 60%–80% of the variances) and higher baroclinic modes in the extratropics (40%–60% of the seasonal variance). Seasonally, except in the western Coral Sea where the Ekman pumping is significant, the wind-driven first-mode baroclinic Rossby waves originating to the east of the date line control the sea level variations over most tropical Pacific regions. In the domain where the 1.5-layer reduced gravity model becomes deficient, the surface heat fluxes dominate, explaining ∼40%–80% of sea level variance. For interannual variability, ∼40%–60% of the variance are El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) related. The wind-driven Rossby and Kelvin waves east of the date line explain ∼40%–78% of the interannual variance in the tropical Pacific. Outside the tropics, small-scale diffusive processes are presumed critical for interannual variability according to a thermodynamic analysis using an eddy-permitting ocean model simulation. Further process and predictive understandings can be achieved with the coupled climate models properly parameterizing the subgrid-scale processes.

Funder

the National Key Research and Development Program of China

Innovative Research Group Project of the National Natural Science Foundation of China

the program for scientific research start-up funds of Guangdong Ocean University

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Oceanography

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