Numerical Simulations of Nonlinear Internal Waves in the South China Sea

Numerical Simulations of Nonlinear Internal Waves in the South China Sea
Author: Zhonghua Zhang
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

Field observations and satellite imagery have demonstrated the ubiquitous nature of internal waves, and substantial evidence indicates that they play a significant role in nutrient transport, energy distribution and mixing throughout the world's oceans. As a result, internal waves have attracted a great deal of interest in the past few decades. However, because of the complex nature of internal waves, particularly in regard to their nonlinear and nonhydrostatic characteristics, basic properties of internal waves still lack satisfactory explanation, including how they are generated, how they propagate, and how they dissipate their energy in the open ocean and on continental margins. To obtain a better understanding of internal waves, we use SUNTANS, a three-dimensional, unstructured-grid, nonhydrostatic Navier-Stokes code, to simulate internal waves in the South China Sea (SCS), where extremely large-amplitude internal waves have been observed. To capture the nonlinear features of internal waves, a total variation diminishing method has been developed to accurately solve the three-dimensional scalar transport equation with unstructured grids in SUNTANS. Taking advantage of this scheme, we employ both two- and three-dimensional numerical simulations with idealized and real bathymetry and perform detailed analyses of internal wave energetics and dynamics to understand how they are generated in the SCS and how they evolve into trains of weakly nonlinear solitary-like waves. The simulation results indicate that nonlinear internal waves in the SCS are generated by strong barotropic flow over complex topography at a ridge on the eastern edge of the Luzon Strait, which connects the eastern boundary of the SCS to the Pacific Ocean. Idealized two-dimensional simulations show that the internal Froude number over the topography, or the ratio of the barotropic currents to the first-mode internal wave speed, can be the most important parameter governing the generation with a strong effect both on the amplitude of the generated waves and the phase in the barotropic tide at which internal waves are generated. For low-Froude number generation, linear first-mode waves are always generated at the end of the ebb tide, and increasing the Froude number causes waves to be generated earlier given the flow is subcritical. However, because the internal Froude number in the SCS is small, the three-dimensional simulations with real topography and stratification indicate that the excursion parameter, which is the ratio of the tidal excursion to the topographic scale, is the most important parameter governing the generation mechanism. With small tidal excursion parameters in the SCS, the well-known A and B waves are both likely generated by the internal tide mechanism. The A waves evolve from the formation of diurnal internal tidal beams at critical topography along the eastern ridge of the two ridge-system in the southern portion of the Luzon Strait. The B waves, on the other hand, are generated due to the formation of internal tides resulting from semidiurnal barotropic currents along the eastern ridge in the northern portion of the Luzon Strait. An analysis of the energetics indicates that half of the baroclinic or internal tidal energy dissipates locally over the ridge within the Strait, while the other half radiates away from the generation site and into the SCS basin. As the waves propagate across the SCS basin, they develop into trains of rank-ordered solitary-like internal waves under the effects of nonlinear steepening and nonhydrostatic dispersion. Because it employs the nonhydrostatic pressure, the SUNTANS model accurately captures these effects as well as the complex processes of wave diffraction, refraction, and wave-wave interaction on the continental shelf at the western edge of the SCS.

Seismic Oceanography Investigation of Nonlinear Internal Waves in the South China Sea

Seismic Oceanography Investigation of Nonlinear Internal Waves in the South China Sea
Author: Alicia VonLanken
Publisher:
Total Pages: 40
Release: 2012
Genre: Geophysics
ISBN: 9781267649409

South China Sea nonlinear internal waves (NLIWs) are some of the largest-amplitude NLIWs observed on Earth. These waves are generated as the result of tidal interaction with the unique topography of the Luzon Strait, which produces large displacements and high wave speeds. Investigations of these waves are fundamental for the understanding of ocean mixing processes as well as NLIW influence on naval operations. Through the processing and analysis of marine seismic reflection data in the SCS, Luzon Strait region, we imaged the 2-D structure and temporal evolution of a NLIW through observations, displacement analysis, offset-limited stack panels and dynamic model comparisons. The imaged NLIW is a 6-km-wide packet of displacements visible down to 1200 m with a leading edge of depression trailed by three peaks. High horizontal wavenumbers in the shallow layers correlate to high buoyancy frequencies that indicate a pycnocline within the first 200 m. Analysis of hand-tracked reflections throughout the packet suggest that the imaged waves are coupled with a mode-2 structure. To address processing of fast-moving targets, an offset-limited stacking method is developed, producing a sequence of sharper, time-progressive images of the wave. The four offset-limited stack panels reveal a westward speed of 0.8 ± 0.5 ms-1. A dynamic model predicts a westward speed of 1.2 ms-1 and a similar mode-2 structure, in agreement with our results. The model predicts the approximate arrival time, location, and average amplitude of NLIWs in the SCS but fails to capture the complex structure of the seismically imaged wave. We conclude that seismic oceanography techniques are capable of capturing, processing, and analyzing NLIW characteristics.

Regional Oceanography Of The South China Sea

Regional Oceanography Of The South China Sea
Author: Jianyu Hu
Publisher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 500
Release: 2020-06-24
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9811206929

This book aims to share newly obtained results and information on regional oceanography of the South China Sea by leading experts in fields such as water mass, circulation, mesoscale eddies, near-inertial motion, upwelling, mixing, continental shelf waves, internal waves and fronts. These comprehensive results can provide new insights on global and regional climate change.

Statistics of Acoustic Pulse Signals Through Nonlinear Internal Waves on the Continental Shelf of the Northeastern South China Sea

Statistics of Acoustic Pulse Signals Through Nonlinear Internal Waves on the Continental Shelf of the Northeastern South China Sea
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 124
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

A component of the Office of Naval Research (ONR) funded Windy Islands Soliton Experiment (WISE) was conducted from 13 - 15 April 2005 on the continental shelf in the northeast portion of the South China Sea to study the effects of nonlinear internal waves on the transmission of a 400-Hz signal. To capture the ocean variability along the acoustic path, a series of environmental moorings were deployed that sampled the water column. Significant variability in the sound-speed field was observed to be induced by nonlinear internal tides with a broad (~ 10 km) horizontal scale (referred to as the "long-wave pattern") and narrow (

Lagrangian Observations of Nonlinear Internal Waves and Turbulence Mixing in Luzon Strait and South China Sea and Internal Wave in the Vicinity of the Kuroshio Path

Lagrangian Observations of Nonlinear Internal Waves and Turbulence Mixing in Luzon Strait and South China Sea and Internal Wave in the Vicinity of the Kuroshio Path
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 22
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

Two related projects were funded sequentially under the same grant number. The first was to conduct an experiment near DongSha Island, using the Lagrangian float, to understand the energy cascade from barotropic tides, internal tides, nonlinear internal waves, to turbulence mixing in the northern South China Sea. Results are reported. The second was to analyze observations of data taken in the vicinity of the Kuroshio path from Luzon Strait to the southern East China Sea. Results are reported.

Nonlinear Internal Waves in Lakes

Nonlinear Internal Waves in Lakes
Author: Kolumban Hutter
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2011-11-25
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3642234380

Internal wave dynamics in lakes (and oceans) is an important physical component of geophysical fluid mechanics of ‘quiescent’ water bodies of the Globe. The formation of internal waves requires seasonal stratification of the water bodies and generation by (primarily) wind forces. Because they propagate in basins of variable depth, a generated wave field often experiences transformation from large basin-wide scales to smaller scales. As long as this fission is hydrodynamically stable, nothing dramatic will happen. However, if vertical density gradients and shearing of the horizontal currents in the metalimnion combine to a Richardson number sufficiently small (