Abstract

AbstractThe summertime eastward jet (SEJ) in the South China Sea (SCS) can be regarded as the boundary between the southern and northern upper circulation of the SCS in climatology. The dynamic process of SEJ migration in response to the variation of SCS summer monsoon (SCSSM) strength on the interannual scale is investigated, based on the Simple Ocean Data Assimilation (SODA) dataset and by a 1.5‐layer reduced gravity model. Analysis shows that SEJ position is closely related to SCSSM strength, with southward/northward migration of SEJ coinciding with stronger/weaker SCSSM. Besides migration of wind stress curl (WSC) zero‐line and north‐south difference of WSC variation, the north‐south difference of the SCS upper layer thickness (ULT) in summer, that is, thick in the southern SCS and thin in the northern SCS, also plays a significant role in the dynamic process of SEJ migration. It is the joint effect of wind strength and ULT distribution. With the variation of SCSSM strength, the thinner ULT in the northern SCS corresponds to the larger magnitude of potential vorticity (PV) variation inputted by wind stress, which leads to more pronounced strengthening/weakening of the western boundary current (WBC) in the northern SCS than that in the southern SCS. Then, the north and south WBCs compete with each other until the upper layer circulation reaches a new equilibrium state, and SEJ migrates southward/northward accordingly.

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