Circulation and water masses of the Arabian Sea

Shetye, S. R. ; Gouveia, A. D. ; Shenoi, S. S. C. (1994) Circulation and water masses of the Arabian Sea Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences - Earth and Planetary Sciences, 103 (2). pp. 107-123. ISSN 0253-4126

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Official URL: http://www.ias.ac.in/j_archive/epsci/103/2/107-123...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02839532

Abstract

The dynamics and thermodynamics of the surface layer of the Arabian Sea, north of about 10N, are dominated by the monsoon-related annual cycle of air-sea fluxes of momentum and heat. The currents in open-sea regime of this layer can be largely accounted for by Ekman drift and the thermal field is dominated by local heat fluxes. The geostrophic currents in open-sea subsurface regime also show a seasonal cycle and there is some evidence that signatures of this cycle appear as deep as 1000 m. The forcing due to Ekman suction is an important mechanism for the geostrophic currents in the central and western parts of the Sea. Recent studies suggest that the eastern part is strongly influenced by the Rossby waves radiated by the Kelvin waves propagating along the west coast of India. The circulation in the coastal region off Oman is driven mainly by local winds and there is no remotely driven western boundary current. Local wind-driving is also important to the coastal circulation off western India during the southwest monsoon but not during the northeast monsoon when a strong (approximately 7 × 106m3/sec) current moves poleward against weak winds. This current is driven by a pressure gradient which forms along this coast during the northeast monsoon due to either thermohaline-forcing or due to the arrival of Kelvin waves from the Bay of Bengal. The present speculation about flow of bottom water (deeper than about 3500 m) in the Arabian Sea is that it moves northward and upwells into the layer of North Indian Deep Water (approximately 1500-3500m). It is further speculated that the flow in this layer consists of a poleward western boundary current and a weak equatorward flow in the interior. It is not known if there is an annual cycle associated with the deep and the bottom water circulation.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Indian Academy of Sciences.
Keywords:Arabian Sea; N. Indian Ocean; Water Masses; Mixed Layer; Circulation; Coastal Currents
ID Code:54073
Deposited On:11 Aug 2011 12:02
Last Modified:18 May 2016 06:56

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