Physical mechanisms for the offshore detachment of the Changjiang Diluted Water in the East China Sea
Physical mechanisms for the offshore detachment of the Changjiang Diluted Water in the East China Sea
Date
2008-02-02
Authors
Chen, Changsheng
Xue, Pengfei
Ding, Pingxing
Beardsley, Robert C.
Xu, Qichun
Mao, Xianmou
Gao, Guoping
Qi, Jianhua
Li, Chunyan
Lin, Huichan
Cowles, Geoffrey W.
Shi, Maochong
Xue, Pengfei
Ding, Pingxing
Beardsley, Robert C.
Xu, Qichun
Mao, Xianmou
Gao, Guoping
Qi, Jianhua
Li, Chunyan
Lin, Huichan
Cowles, Geoffrey W.
Shi, Maochong
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DOI
10.1029/2006JC003994
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Keywords
Unstructured grid model
Eddies
River plume baroclinic instability
Eddies
River plume baroclinic instability
Abstract
Physical mechanisms for the summertime offshore detachment of the Changjiang Diluted Water (CDW) into the East China Sea are examined using the high-resolution, unstructured-grid, Finite-Volume Coastal Ocean Model (FVCOM). The model results suggest that isolated low salinity water lens detected west of Cheju Island can be formed by (1) a large-scale adjustment of the flow field to the Changjiang discharge and (2) the detachment of anticyclonic eddies as a result of baroclinic instability of the CDW front. Adding the Changjiang discharge intensifies the clockwise vorticity of the subsurface current (originating from the Taiwan Warm Current) flowing along the 50-m isobath and thus drives the low-salinity water in the northern coastal area of the Changjiang mouth offshore over a submerged plateau that extends toward Cheju Island. Given a model horizontal resolution of less than 1.0 km, the CDW front becomes baroclinically unstable and forms a chain of anticyclonic and cyclonic eddies. The offshore detachment of anticyclonic eddies can carry the CDW offshore. This process is enhanced under northward winds as a result of the spatially nonuniform interaction of wind-induced Ekman flow and eddy-generated frontal density currents. Characteristics of the model-predicted eddy field are consistent with previous theoretical studies of baroclinic instability of buoyancy-driven coastal density currents and existing satellite imagery. The plume stability is controlled by the horizontal Ekman number. In the Changjiang, this number is much smaller than the criterion suggested by a theoretical analysis.
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Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2008. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 113 (2008): C02002, doi:10.1029/2006JC003994.
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Journal of Geophysical Research 113 (2008): C02002