Eastern Boundary Currents and Coastal Upwelling
Open Access
- 1 August 1982
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Physical Oceanography
- Vol. 12 (8) , 862-879
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0485(1982)012<0862:ebcacu>2.0.co;2
Abstract
The adjustment of the eastern coastal zone of an inviscid ocean with vertical walls to a change in wind conditions occurs in two stages. After the propagation of a Kelvin wave across the forced region in a time Tk which is of the order of a day or two, the coastal upwelling zone is temporarily in equilibrium with the wind. Further adjustment occurs after a time TR, which is of the order of a few mouths, when westward Rossby dispersion of the coastal jet becomes important. These time scales define three frequency ranges that characterize the response to fluctuating winds with period P. 1) At high frequencies (P ≲ Tk) short Kelvin waves can destroy coherence between the forcing and response, alonshore coherence of oceanic variables is small, and the spectrum of the response is red even if that of the forcing is white. The offshore wale of the response is the radius of deformation. Poleward phase propagation at Kelvin wave speed c in unforced regions and at speed 2c in the forced region is prominent... Abstract The adjustment of the eastern coastal zone of an inviscid ocean with vertical walls to a change in wind conditions occurs in two stages. After the propagation of a Kelvin wave across the forced region in a time Tk which is of the order of a day or two, the coastal upwelling zone is temporarily in equilibrium with the wind. Further adjustment occurs after a time TR, which is of the order of a few mouths, when westward Rossby dispersion of the coastal jet becomes important. These time scales define three frequency ranges that characterize the response to fluctuating winds with period P. 1) At high frequencies (P ≲ Tk) short Kelvin waves can destroy coherence between the forcing and response, alonshore coherence of oceanic variables is small, and the spectrum of the response is red even if that of the forcing is white. The offshore wale of the response is the radius of deformation. Poleward phase propagation at Kelvin wave speed c in unforced regions and at speed 2c in the forced region is prominent...Keywords
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