Abstract

A series of two-layer quasigeostrophic solutions for the ocean circulation driven by a steady wind in a channel with topography and in a flat bottom rectangular basin are presented in which the atmosphere and ocean are inertially coupled through the surface stress relation. The only other frictional processes are biharmonic lateral friction (under free-slip boundary conditions) and topographic form stress; there is no bottom friction involved. The results indicate that realistic momentum balances can be obtained on this physical basis. Two types of solutions are obtained, which are called (i) the I series in which the inertial coupling relation is applied directly in the earth reference frame with no current averaging and almost steady stream fields occur and (ii) the S series in which the inertial coupling relation is applied for long current averaging periods, of the order 100 days, rather than instantaneously. The solutions for the longer current averaging periods produce vigorous eddy fields, but their time-mean is very similar to the corresponding solution with no current averaging. Surface Stokes drift streamfields are also generated by the inertial coupling mechanism. Some implications of the results for general circulation modeling are discussed.

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