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The upper-ocean response to monsoonal forcing in the Arabian Sea: seasonal and spatial variability

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TLDR
In this article, the seasonal and spatial variability of the upper ocean response to the Monsoon cycle in the Arabian Sea was examined using four towed profiler surveys conducted between December 1994 and October 1995.
Abstract
Observations from four towed profiler surveys undertaken between December 1994 and October 1995 examine the seasonal and spatial variability of the upper ocean response to the Monsoon cycle in the Arabian Sea. Although observed atmospheric forcing agrees well with modern climatologies, cross-basin patterns of mixed-layer depth and water properties observed in 1994–1995 are not entirely consistent with an upper-ocean response dominated by Ekman pumping. During the winter monsoon, the mixed-layer deepens dramatically with distance offshore. Surface cooling intensifies with offshore distance, and a one-dimensional response dominated by convective overturning could explain observed wintertime mixed-layer depths. Except for waters associated with a filament extending offshore from the Omani coast, mixed-layer depths and water properties show only modest cross-basin contrasts during the Southwest Monsoon. Filament waters differ from surrounding mid-basin waters, having shallow mixed-layers and water properties similar to those of waters upwelled near the Omani coast. In September, following the Southwest Monsoon, waters within 1000 km of the Omani coast have cooled and freshened, with marked changes in stratification extending well into the pycnocline. Estimates of Ekman pumping and wind-driven entrainment made using the Southampton Oceanographic Center 1980–1995 surface flux and the Levitus mixed-layer climatologies indicate that during the Southwest Monsoon wind-driven entrainment is considerably stronger than Ekman pumping. Inshore of the windstress maximum, Ekman pumping partially counters wind-driven entrainment, while offshore the two processes act together to deepen the mixed-layer. As Ekman pumping is too weak to counter wind-driven mixed-layer deepening inshore of the windstress maximum, another mechanism must act to maintain the shallow mixed-layers seen in our observations and in climatologies. Offshore advection of coastally upwelled water offers a mechanism for maintaining upper ocean stratification that is consistent with observed changes in upper ocean water properties. Ekman upwelling will modulate wind-driven entrainment, but these results indicate that the primary mechanisms acting inshore of the windstress maximum are wind-driven mixing and horizontal advection.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Planktonic community structure and carbon cycling in the Arabian Sea as a result of monsoonal forcing: the application of a generic model

TL;DR: The Arabian Sea exhibits a complex pattern of biogeochemical and ecological dynamics, which vary both seasonally and spatially as mentioned in this paper, using a one-dimensional vertical hydrodynamic model coupled to a complex ecosystem model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon budget in the eastern and central Arabian Sea: An Indian JGOFS synthesis

TL;DR: In this paper, the carbon budget for the eastern and central Arabian Sea was constructed using results from the Modular Ocean Model and biogeochemical data collected largely under the Indian Joint Global Ocean Flux Study programme.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling of mesoscale coupled ocean–atmosphere interaction and its feedback to ocean in the western Arabian Sea

TL;DR: In this paper, a high-resolution regional coupled model is employed to explore the feedback effect on the long-term dynamical and thermodynamic structure of the ocean, and the longterm latent heat flux change due to eddies in the model is approximately 10-15 W/m 2 over the cold filaments, consistent with previous estimates based on short-term in situ measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Holocene evolution of summer winds and marine productivity in the tropical Indian Ocean in response to insolation forcing: data-model comparison

TL;DR: In this paper, the relative abundance of Globigerinoides bulloides was used to infer Holocene paleo-productivity changes on the Oman margin and at the southern tip of India.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraseasonal variability of mixed layer depth in the tropical Indian Ocean

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used an observational dataset built from Argo in situ profiles to describe the main large-scale patterns of intraseasonal mixed layer depth (MLD) variations in the Indian Ocean.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A technique for objective analysis and design of oceanographic experiments applied to MODE-73

TL;DR: In this article, a technique for the objective analysis of oceanic data has been developed and used on simulated data, which is based on a standard statistical result, the Gauss-Markov Theorem, which gives an expression for the least square error linear estimate of some physical variable given measurements at a limited number of data points, the statistics of the field being estimated in the form of space-time spectra, and the measurement errors.
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A numerical investigation of dynamics, thermodynamics and mixed-layer processes in the Indian Ocean

TL;DR: In this article, a 212-layer, thermodynamic numerical model is used to study the dynamics, thermodynamics and mixed-layer physics of Indian Ocean circulation, and a surface mixed layer of temperature Tm is imbedded in the upper layer of the model, and entrainment and detrainment in the mixed layer are determined by wind stirring and surface cooling.
Journal ArticleDOI

A major low-level air current near the Indian Ocean during the northern summer

TL;DR: The high-energy flow, in the form of low-level southerly jet streams which have been reported earlier over Kenya, is only one part of a much more extensive current of air which flows rapidly around the western half of the Indian Ocean during the northern summer as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution and optical properties of CDOM in the Arabian Sea during the 1995 Southwest Monsoon

TL;DR: In this paper, spatial and temporal variability in concentration and optical properties of colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM) were examined in the Arabian Sea during the 1995 Southwest (Summer) Monsoon on NRL/Seasoar Cruise, 21 June-12 July 1995.
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