Mixing Processes at the Southwestern Entrance to the Japan/East Sea SCIE SCOPUS

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Title
Mixing Processes at the Southwestern Entrance to the Japan/East Sea
Author(s)
Wijesekera, Hemantha W.; Luecke, Conrad A.; Wang, David W.; Jarosz, Ewa; Derada, Sergio; Teague, William J.; Chang, Kyung-Il; Lee, Jae Hak; Min, Hong Sik; Nam, Sunghyun
KIOST Author(s)
Min, Hong Sik(민홍식)
Alternative Author(s)
민홍식
Publication Year
2023-12
Abstract
Small-scale processes at the southwestern boundary of the Ulleung Basin (UB) in the Japan/East Sea (JES) were examined using combined ship-based and moored observations along with model output. Model results show baroclinic semidiurnal tides are generated at the shelf break and corresponding slope connecting the Korea/Tsushima Strait with the UB and propagate into the UB with large barotropic-to-baroclinic energy conversion over the slope. Observations show highfrequency internal wave packets and indicate strong velocity shear and energetic turbulence associated with baroclinic tides in the stratified bottom layer. Solitary-like waves with frequencies from 0.2N to 0.5N (buoyancy frequency N) were found at the edge of the shelf break with supercritical flow. For subcritical flow, a hydraulic jump formed over the shelf break with weakly dispersive internal lee waves with frequencies varying from 0.5N to N. These high-frequency lee waves were trapped in the stratified bottom layer, with wave stress similar to the turbulent stress near the bottom. The power loss due to turbulent bottom drag can be an important factor for energy loss associated with the hydraulic jump. Turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rates of ~10-4 W kg-1 were found. Large downward heat and salt fluxes below the high-salinity core mix warm/salty Tsushima Current Water with cold/low-salinity JES Intermediate Water. Mixing over the shelf break could be very important to the JES circulation since the calculated diapycnal upwelling (1–6 m day-1) at the shelf break and slope is substantially greater than the basin-averaged estimate from chemical tracers and modeling studies. © 2023 American Meteorological Society.
ISSN
0022-3670
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/44980
DOI
10.1175/JPO-D-23-0061.1
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Physical Oceanography, v.53, no.12, pp.2797 - 2821, 2023
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Keywords
Continental shelf/slope; Internal waves; Mixing; Small scale processes; Tides; Turbulence
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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