Abstract The decay of the low‐mode internal tide due to the superharmonic energy cascade is investigated in a realistically forced global Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model simulation with 1/25° (4 km) horizontal grid spacing. Time‐mean and depth‐integrated supertidal kinetic energy is found to be largest near low‐latitude internal tide generation sites, such as the Bay of Bengal, Amazon Shelf, and Mascarene Ridge. The supertidal kinetic energy can make up to 50% of the total internal tide kinetic energy several hundred kilometers from the generation sites. As opposed to the tidal flux divergence, the supertidal flux divergence does not correlate with the barotropic to baroclinic energy conversion. Instead, the time‐mean and depth‐integrated supertidal flux divergence correlates with the nonlinear kinetic energy transfers from (sub)tidal to supertidal frequency bands as estimated with a novel coarse‐graining approach. The regular spaced banding patterns of the surface‐intensified nonlinear energy transfers are attributed to semidiurnal mode 1 and mode 2 internal waves that interfere constructively at the surface. This causes patches where both surface tidal kinetic energy and nonlinear energy transfers are elevated. The simulated internal tide off the Amazon Shelf steepens significantly near these patches, generating solitary‐like waves in good agreement with Synthetic Aperture Radar imagery. Globally, we find that regions of high supertidal energy flux also show a high correlation with observed instances of internal solitary waves.
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Energetics of (Super)Tidal Baroclinic Modes in a Realistically Forced Global Ocean Simulation
Abstract In this study, we diagnose the spatial variability in the energetics of tidally generated diurnal, semidiurnal, and supertidal ( cycles per day) internal wave vertical modes (up to mode 6) in a 30‐day forward global ocean model simulation with a 4‐km grid spacing and 41 layers. The simulation is forced with realistic tides and atmospheric fields. Diurnal modes are resolved beyond mode 6, semidiurnal modes are resolved up to mode 4, and supertidal modes are resolved up to mode 2, in agreement with a canonical horizontal resolution criterion. The meridional trends in the kinetic to available potential energy ratios of these resolved modes agree with an internal wave consistency relation. The supertidal band is dominated by the higher harmonics of the diurnal and semidiurnal tides. Its higher harmonic energy projects on the internal wave dispersion curves in frequency‐wavenumber spectra and is captured mostly by the terdiurnal and quarterdiurnal mode‐1 waves. Terdiurnal modes are mostly generated in the west Pacific, where diurnal internal tides are strong. In contrast, quarterdiurnal modes occur at all longitudes near strong semidiurnal generation sites. The globally integrated energy in the supertidal band is about one order of magnitude smaller than the energy in the tidal band. The supertidal energy as a fraction of the tidal energy is elevated along semidiurnal internal wave beams in the tropics. We attribute this to near‐resonant interactions between tidal modes of the same mode number.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2319143
- PAR ID:
- 10608439
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
- Volume:
- 130
- Issue:
- 6
- ISSN:
- 2169-9275
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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