Abstract

AbstractBased on mooring observations from October 10 to 5 November 2017 at four stations in the Northwestern Pacific, the characteristics of four strong near‐inertial wave (NIW) packets generated by the typhoon Lan were examined. The wave‐packet analysis revealed that for the NIWs with larger horizontal wavelengths, as their interactions with the background currents were weakened, the observed frequency was close to the intrinsic frequency. The near‐inertial kinetic energy (NIKE) between two cyclonic eddies penetrated deeper (∼620 m) than that in a negative vorticity region. A ray‐tracing model suggested that it was the strong positive vorticity to the north that caused the northward propagating NIWs to be reflected, and then the reflected NIWs were accelerated to propagate downward at ∼70 m depth where the stratification was strongest. In these two cases, furthermore, the efficiency of the downward propagation of NIKE was at a comparable level of 21%–25%. Energy budget analysis indicated that about 5%–25% of the near‐inertial wind work was injected into the upper 50–200 m, approximately 6%–25% of which could be further radiated to the deeper ocean. On average, after the passage of the typhoon Lan, the dissipation rate increased by 3–8 times, and for the enhanced diapycnal mixing, ∼42% of the energy was provided by the typhoon‐induced strong NIWs.

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