Physics
Scientific paper
Apr 2004
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2004georl..3108305s&link_type=abstract
Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 31, Issue 8, CiteID L08305
Physics
14
Oceanography: Physical: Upper Ocean Processes, Oceanography: Physical: Air/Sea Interactions (0312), Oceanography: Physical: Eddies And Mesoscale Processes, Oceanography: General: Diurnal, Seasonal, And Annual Cycles, Information Related To Geographic Region: Indian Ocean
Scientific paper
A warm pool forms in the southeastern Arabian Sea (SEAS) prior to the onset of the summer monsoon over India in early June; the core of this warm pool is in the Lakshadweep Sea (LS). XBT and surface salinity data collected in the LS during May-2002-April-2003 show that temperature inversions occur off the southwest coast of India in early December with the arrival of low-salinity waters from the Bay of Bengal. The low-salinity waters and the inversions propagate westward along with the downwelling Rossby waves that constitute the Lakshadweep sea-level high; inversions occur in the western LS (~73°E) about 40 days after they occur near the coast in the eastern LS (~75.5°E). They disappear in April, when the Tropical Convergence Zone moves over the SEAS and the warm pool engulfs the region. Ocean dynamics and air-sea fluxes are together responsible for the formation and westward propagation of the inversions.
Araligidad N.
Durand Fabien
Gopalakrishna Vissa V.
Johnson Z.
Michael G. S.
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