Abstract

Abstract An alongshore wind stress is applied at the eastern boundary of an ocean model, and its effects on the structure of the circulation in the ventilated pycnocline are studied. The offshore surface Ekman flow associated with such a wind is taken to be balanced by onshore geostrophic transport distributed over the surface and subsurface layers. Hence, the layer interfaces at the boundary slope downward and equatorward, giving nonzero thicknesses. Because of this, some geostrophic contours (lines of constant potential vorticity) emerge from the eastern wall and strike northward, while some strike southward, giving rise to northern and southern limbs of the eastern shadow zones described by Luyten et al. The position of the layer-interface outcrop that forms the northern boundary of the northern limb of a shadow zone may not be freely chosen, but is determined so as to be consistent with the eastern boundary conditions, whose constraints are transmitted along the geostrophic contours. The westward exte...

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