Importance of Seasonally Evolving Near‐Surface Salinity Stratification on Mixed Layer Heat Budget During Summer Monsoon Intraseasonal Oscillation in the Northern Bay of Bengal in 2019

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Date
2023-11-13
Authors
Sherin, Vidwil Raju
Girishkumar, M. S.
Shivaprasad, S.
Sureshkumar, N.
Farrar, J. Thomas
Athulya, K.
Ashin, K.
Rama Rao, E. Pattabhi
Sengupta, Debasis
Venkatesan, Ramasamy
Ravichandran, M.
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DOI
10.1029/2023jc019800
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Keywords
Bay of Bengal
Monsoon intraseasonal oscillation
Mixed layer heat budget
Salinity stratification
Abstract
The discharge of freshwater from major rivers into the northern Bay of Bengal (BoB) increases dramatically during the summer monsoon season, reaching a peak in August–September, and there is a corresponding increase in the vertical salinity gradient in the upper ocean. Here we study the impact of seasonally evolving near-surface salinity stratification on the response of ocean mixed layer temperature (MLT) to Summer Monsoon Intraseasonal Oscillations (MISO), using accurate surface fluxes and high vertical resolution (∼2 m) hydrographic measurements from a mooring in the northern BoB (17.8°N, 89.5°E) during June–September 2019. Prominent MLT warming and cooling with a range of 1.5°C is observed between suppressed (clear skies, calm winds) and active (cloudy, windy) phases of MISO convection. However, the intraseasonal MLT response to the active phase of a late-season MISO event is minimal compared to MISO events in early summer. We infer this is primarily due to the much smaller contribution from oceanic vertical processes (∼6 Wm−2) in late summer 2019, compared to their role in early summer (−15 to −55 Wm−2). During the active phase of the MISO event of late summer 2019, the combined effect of reduced entrainment and weak vertical temperature gradients associated with a barrier layer inhibits near-surface cooling. Conversely, the near-surface salinity stratification and the barrier layer are weak during MISO events in the early summer of 2019—these hydrographic conditions lead to enhanced MLT cooling in response to MISO, apparently through a freer turbulent exchange of cool thermocline water with the surface layer.
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Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2023. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Sherin, V., Girishkumar, M., Shivaprasad, S., Sureshkumar, N., Farrar, J. T., Athulya, K., Ashin, K., Rao, E., Sengupta, D., Venkatesan, R., & Ravichandran, M. (2023). Importance of Seasonally Evolving Near‐Surface Salinity Stratification on Mixed Layer Heat Budget During Summer Monsoon Intraseasonal Oscillation in the Northern Bay of Bengal in 2019. Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 128(11), e2023JC019800, https://doi.org/10.1029/2023jc019800.
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Sherin, V., Girishkumar, M., Shivaprasad, S., Sureshkumar, N., Farrar, J. T., Athulya, K., Ashin, K., Rao, E., Sengupta, D., Venkatesan, R., & Ravichandran, M. (2023). Importance of Seasonally Evolving Near‐Surface Salinity Stratification on Mixed Layer Heat Budget During Summer Monsoon Intraseasonal Oscillation in the Northern Bay of Bengal in 2019. Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 128(11), e2023JC019800.
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