Abstract
Abstract. Nan-Wan Bay in Taiwan and the Gulf of Elat in Israel are two different coastal environments, and as such, their currents are expected to have different statistical properties. While Nan-Wan Bay is shallow, has three open boundaries, and is directly connected to the open ocean, the Gulf of Elat is deep, semi-enclosed, and connected to the Red Sea via the Straits of Tiran. Surface currents have been continuously measured with fine temporal (less than or equal to 1 h) and spatial resolution (less than or equal to 1 km) for more than a year in both environments using coastal radars (CODARs) that cover a domain of roughly 10 × 10 km. These measurements show that the currents in Nan-Wan Bay are much stronger than those in the Gulf of Elat and that the mean current field in Nan-Wan Bay exhibits cyclonic circulation, which is stronger in the summer; in the Gulf of Elat, the mean current field is directed southward and is also stronger during the summer. We have compared the statistical properties of the current speeds in both environments and found that both exhibit large spatial and seasonal variations in the shape parameter of the Weibull distribution. However, we have found fundamental and significant differences when comparing the temporal asymmetry of the current speed (i.e., the ratio between the time during which the current speed increases and the total time). While the Nan-Wan Bay currents are significantly asymmetric, those of the Gulf of Elat are not. We then extracted the tidal component of the Nan-Wan Bay currents and found that it is strongly asymmetric, while the asymmetry of tidally filtered currents is much weaker. We thus conclude that the temporal asymmetry of the Nan-Wan Bay currents reported here is due to the strong tides in the region. We show that the asymmetry ratio in Nan-Wan Bay varies spatially and seasonally: (i) the currents increase rapidly and decay slowly in the northern part of the domain and vice versa in the southern part, and (ii) the asymmetry is stronger during summer.
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy
Reference40 articles.
1. Afargan, H. and Gildor, H.: The role of the wind in the formation of coherent eddies in the Gulf of Eilat/Aqaba, J. Marine Syst., 142, 75–95, 2015.
2. Ashkenazy, Y. and Gildor, H.: Long-range temporal correlations of ocean surface currents, J. Geophys. Res., 114, C09009, https://doi.org/10.1029/2008JC005235, 2009.
3. Ashkenazy, Y. and Gildor, H.: On the probability and spatial distribution of ocean surface currents, J. Phys. Oceanogr., 41, 2295–2306, 2011.
4. Ashkenazy, Y., Feliks, Y., Gildor, H., and Tziperman, E.: Asymmetry of daily temperature records, J. Atmos. Sci., 65, 3327–3336, 2008.
5. Barrick, D. E., Lipa, B. J., and Crissman, R. D.: Mapping surface currents with CODAR, Sea Technol., 26, 43–48, 1985.
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献