The wind-driven seasonal circulation in the southern tropical Indian Ocean

A numerical model of the Indian Ocean, driven by climatological monthly mean winds, realistically simulates the major features of the large scale upper ocean circulation observed in the southern hemisphere and equatorial regions. The principal feature in the tropical Indian Ocean is a basin-wide clockwise southern hemisphere (cyclonic) gyre comprised of the South Equatorial Current to the south, the South Equatorial Countercurrent to the north, and the East African Coastal Current in the west. Rossby waves propagate westward in the shear zone between the South Equatorial Current and the South Equatorial Countercurrent, and are obstructed and partially reflected by the banks along the Seychelles-Mauritius Ridge (60°E). A region of high eddy activity northwest of Madagascar is an extension of the tropical gyre and is a tropical analog to the Gulf Stream recirculation region. Oscillations in meridional transport at the equator have westward phase speed and eastward group velocity and are the result of mixed Rossby-gravity (Yanai) waves forced by oscillations in the highly nonlinear western boundary current region. Oscillations with 40- to 50-day periods are seen in most currents. These oscillations cannot be atmospherically forced, as the shortest period in the mean monthly wind forcing is 60 days. Mean transports in the western basin agree with observations. Small (2 Sv) mean throughflow from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean at the eastern open boundary is due to wind-forced Indian Ocean dynamics alone and is within the range of observations of throughflow from the Pacific.

[1]  R. Thompson Observations of the Leeuwin Current off Western Australia , 1984 .

[2]  D. Moore,et al.  Cross-equatorial inertial jets with special relevance to very remote forcing of the Somali Current , 1979 .

[3]  R. Evans,et al.  Propagation of thermal fronts in the somali current system , 1981 .

[4]  M. Cox A Numerical Study of Somali Current Eddies , 1979 .

[5]  Mark E. Luther,et al.  Modelling the Variability in the Somali Current , 1989 .

[6]  Sol Hellerman,et al.  Normal Monthly Wind Stress Over the World Ocean with Error Estimates , 1983 .

[7]  D. Quadfasel,et al.  Evidence for 50-day period planetary waves in the South Equatorial Current of the Indian Ocean , 1986 .

[8]  J. McCreary,et al.  Excitation of intermediate‐frequency equatorial waves at a western ocean boundary: With application to observations from the Indian Ocean , 1990 .

[9]  J. S. Godfrey,et al.  The Large-Scale Environment of the Poleward-Flowing Leeuwin Current, Western Australia: Longshore Steric Height Gradients, Wind Stresses and Geostrophic Flow , 1985 .

[10]  G. Reverdin,et al.  Free Drifting Buoy Measurements in the Indian Ocean Equatorial Jet , 1983 .

[11]  D. Roemmich,et al.  Equatorial Currents at Semi-Annual Period in the Indian Ocean , 1982 .

[12]  J. S. Godfrey,et al.  The Sverdrup Relation in the Indian Ocean, and the Effect of Pacific-Indian Ocean Throughflow on Indian Ocean Circulation and on the East Australian Current , 1981 .

[13]  J. O'Brien,et al.  Morphology of the Somali Current System during the Southwest Monsoon , 1985 .

[14]  R. Sætre,et al.  The circulation of the Mozambique channel , 1984 .

[15]  O. Brown,et al.  Development of near-surface flow pattern and water mass distribution in the Somali Basin , 1983 .

[16]  T. Barnett Interaction of the Monsoon and Pacific Trade Wind System at Interannual Time Scales Part I: The Equatorial Zone , 1983 .

[17]  J. O'Brien,et al.  A model of the seasonal circulation in the Arabian Sea forced by observed winds , 1985 .

[18]  J. O'Brien,et al.  Open boundary conditions in rotating fluids , 1980 .

[19]  A. Gordon,et al.  Pacific and Indian Ocean Upper-Layer Salinity Budget , 1984 .

[20]  K. Wyrtki,et al.  Oceanographic atlas of the International Indian Ocean Expedition , 1971 .

[21]  N. Nicholls The Southern Oscillation and Indonesian sea surface temperature. , 1984 .

[22]  J. Lutjeharms,et al.  Characteristics of the currents east and south of Madagascar , 1981 .

[23]  R. Fine Direct evidence using tritium data for throughflow from the Pacific into the Indian Ocean , 1985, Nature.

[24]  L. Mysak,et al.  A 40‐ to 60‐day oscillation in the source region of the Somali Current during 1976 , 1984 .

[25]  J. O'Brien,et al.  Equatorial Jet in the Indian Ocean: Theory , 1974, Science.

[26]  P. K. Kundu,et al.  Thermohaline forcing of eastern boundary currents : With application to the circulation off the west coast of Australia , 1986 .

[27]  A. Cutler,et al.  Surface currents of the Indian Ocean (to 25S, 100E): compiled from historical data archived by the Meteorological Office, Bracknell, UK , 1984 .

[28]  R. Knox On a long series of measurements of Indian Ocean equatorial currents near Addu Atoll , 1976 .

[29]  A. Weaver,et al.  On the Dynamics of the Leeuwin Current , 1989 .

[30]  K. Wyrtki,et al.  Indonesian through flow and the associated pressure gradient , 1987 .

[31]  R. Evans,et al.  Evolution of Sea Surface Temperature in the Somali Basin During the Southwest Monsoon of 1979 , 1980, Science.

[32]  P. K. Kundu,et al.  On the Dynamics of the Throughflow from the Pacific into the Indian Ocean , 1986 .

[33]  J. G. Bruce Large-scale variations of the Somali current during the southwest monsoon, 1970 , 1973 .

[34]  J. O'Brien,et al.  Verification of a numerical ocean model of the Arabian Sea , 1988 .

[35]  D. Cadet,et al.  Interannual Variability of Surface Fields over the Indian Ocean during Recent Decades , 1984 .

[36]  P. R. Julian,et al.  Description of Global-Scale Circulation Cells in the Tropics with a 40–50 Day Period , 1972 .

[37]  J. O'Brien,et al.  Objective Analysis of Pseudostress over the Indian Ocean Using a Direct-Minimization Approach , 1989 .

[38]  John C. Swallow,et al.  The boundary currents east and north of Madagascar: 1. Geostrophic currents and transports , 1988 .

[39]  G. Reverdin,et al.  Near-Surface Meanders in the Equatorial Indian Ocean , 1986 .

[40]  J. Kindle,et al.  The 26- and 50-day oscillations in the western Indian Ocean: Model results , 1989 .

[41]  K. Wyrtki,et al.  An Equatorial Jet in the Indian Ocean , 1973, Science.

[42]  J. F. Festa,et al.  Evolution of the climatological near‐surface thermal structure of the tropical Indian Ocean: 1. Description of mean monthly mixed layer depth, and sea surface temperature, surface current, and surface meteorological fields , 1989 .

[43]  W. Duing The monsoon regime of the currents in the Indian Ocean , 1970 .

[44]  P. K. Kundu,et al.  A numerical investigation of the Somali Current during the southwest monsoon , 1988 .

[45]  A. Leetmaa The response of the Somali Current to the southwest monsoon of 1970 , 1972 .

[46]  M. Mcphaden Variability in the central equatorial Indian Ocean. I: Ocean dynamics , 1982 .

[47]  Arnold L. Gordon,et al.  Interocean Exchange of Thermocline Water , 1986 .

[48]  J. Kindle,et al.  The boundary currents east and north of Madagascar: 2. Direct measurements and model comparisons , 1988 .

[49]  J. Pedlosky Geophysical Fluid Dynamics , 1979 .

[50]  R. Knox,et al.  Recent advances in the study of the low-latitude ocean circulation , 1985 .

[51]  F. Schott,et al.  Measurements in the Source Region of the Somali Current during the Monsoon Reversal , 1978 .

[52]  K. Wyrtki Physical oceanography of the Southeast Asian waters , 1961 .

[53]  T. Barnett Interaction of the Monsoon and Pacific Trade Wind System at Interannual Time Scales. Part III: A Partial Anatomy of the Southern Oscillation , 1984 .

[54]  F. Schott,et al.  Monsoon response of the Somali Current and associated upwelling , 1983 .