Abstract

Based on the first year-long record of mixing collected in the eastern central Bay of Bengal, we quantify the role that subsurface turbulent heat fluxes play in upper-ocean cooling brought on by southwest (SW) and northeast (NE) monsoons. During the NE (dry, or winter) monsoon, atmospheric and subsurface turbulent heat fluxes each contribute about 50% of the net sea surface cooling. During the SW (wet, or summer) monsoon, the atmospheric heat flux varied widely due to “active” and “break” cycles of the monsoon intraseasonal oscillations, but had a net positive seasonal average. The subsurface turbulent heat flux during the SW monsoon led to surface cooling at rates more than three times greater than those measured during the NE monsoon. Since the seasonally averaged atmospheric heat flux was positive, subsurface mixing accounted for nearly all of the cooling during the SW monsoon. During the transition between the NE and SW monsoons, subsurface heat flux was near zero, and atmospheric heating rapidly warmed the sea surface. Following the SW monsoon, passage of Tropical Storm Hudhud led to O(1) m2 s–1 rates of turbulence diffusivity and strong subsurface heat flux, accounting for roughly half of the 1.4°C surface cooling that occurred over a 60-hour period.

Highlights

  • The South Asian monsoon is a system of periodically reversing winds and precipitation that is regulated by seasonal migration of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ; Gadgil, 2003)

  • The ITCZ is located in the Northern Hemisphere over the South Asian subcontinent in boreal summer, and the lower limb of the Hadley circulation drives energetic southwesterly winds across the Bay of Bengal (BoB)

  • SUMMARY A year-long record of subsurface mixing at 12°N, 90°E in the BoB highlights processes that heat and cool sea surface temperatures during the NE and SW monsoons and during the passage of a tropical storm

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Summary

Introduction

The South Asian monsoon is a system of periodically reversing winds and precipitation that is regulated by seasonal migration of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ; Gadgil, 2003). During the NE (dry, or winter) monsoon, atmospheric and subsurface turbulent heat fluxes each contribute about 50% of the net sea surface cooling.

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