Abstract

The data of acoustic Doppler profilometers placed at the edge of the steep shelf of Oahu Island, Hawaii, are analyzed for the currents. The specific character of inertial oscillations is revealed in the region: strong elongation of inertial orbits, a large amount of anomalous (cyclonic) current rotation, and sharp weakening in the divergence layer of the background (low-frequency) oscillations, the strong variation of which results in significant deviations of the effective inertial frequency from its local geographical value. It is suggested that cyclonic rotation of the inertial currents is related to a strong decrease in the effective oscillation frequency of the oceanic waves on the shelf.

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