Internal gravity waves, the subsurface analogue of the familiar surface gravity waves that break on beaches, are ubiquitous in the ocean. Because of their strong Internal gravity waves are propagating disturbances of the ocean's density stratification. Their physics resembles that of surface gravity waves but with buoyancy rather than gravity providing their restoring force -making them much larger (10's to 100's of meters instead of 1 to 10 meters) and slower (hours instead of seconds). Generated primarily by tidal flow past seafloor topography and winds blowing on the sea surface, and typically having multi-kilometer-scale horizontal wavelengths, their estimated 1 TW of deep-sea dissipation is understood to play a crucial role in the ocean's global redistribution of heat and momentum 12 . A major challenge is to improve understanding of internal wave generation, propagation, steepening and dissipation, so that the role of internal waves can be more accurately incorporated in climate models.The internal waves that originate from the Luzon Strait on the eastern margin of the South China Sea (SCS) are the largest documented in the global oceans ( Figure 1).As the waves propagate west from the Luzon Strait they steepen dramatically ( Figure 1a), producing distinctive solitary wave fronts evident in sun glint and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images from satellites ( Figure 1b). When they shoal onto the continental slope to the west, the downward displacement of the ocean's layers associated with these solitary waves can exceed 250 m in 5 minutes 8 . On such a scale, these waves pose hazards for underwater navigation and offshore drilling 4 , and supply nutrients from the deep ocean that nourish coral reefs 1 and pilot whale populations that forage in their wakes 13 .Over the past decade a number of field studies have been conducted in the region; this work has been comprehensively reviewed 10,11 . All of these studies, however, focused on the propagation of the internal waves across the SCS and their interactions with the continental shelf of China. Until the present study there had been no substantial in situ data gathered at the generation site of the Luzon Strait, in large part because of the extremely challenging operating conditions. A consequence has been persistent 5 confusion regarding the nature of the generation mechanism 11 ; an underlying cause being the sensitivity of the models employed to the system parameters, such as the chosen transect for a two-dimensional model, the linear internal wave speed or the assumed location of the waves' origin within the Luzon Strait. Furthermore, the lack of in situ data from the Luzon Strait has meant an inability to test numerical predictions of energy budgets 9 and no knowledge of the impact of the Kuroshio on the emergence of internal solitary waves 11 .The goal of IWISE is to obtain the first comprehensive in situ data set from the Luzon Strait, which in combination with high-resolution three-dimensional numerical modeling supports a cradle-to-grave picture ...
Most of the M2 internal tide energy generated at the Hawaiian Ridge radiates away in modes 1 and 2, but direct observation of these propagating waves is complicated by the complexity of the bathymetry at the generation region and by the presence of interference patterns. Observations from satellite altimetry, a tomographic array, and the R/P FLIP taken during the Farfield Program of the Hawaiian Ocean Mixing Experiment (HOME) are found to be in good agreement with the output of a high-resolution primitive equation model, simulating the generation and propagation of internal tides. The model shows that different modes are generated with different amplitudes along complex topography. Multiple sources produce internal tides that sum constructively and destructively as they propagate. The major generation sites can be identified using a simplified 2D idealized knife-edge ridge model. Four line sources located on the Hawaiian Ridge reproduce the interference pattern of sea surface height and energy flux density fields from the numerical model for modes 1 and 2. Waves from multiple sources and their interference pattern have to be taken into account to correctly interpret in situ observations and satellite altimetry.
Abstract. Previous analyses of altimeter and acoustic data indicate that the
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