Abstract

AbstractSatellite altimetry sea surface height (SSH) measurements from 1993 to 2017 are used to investigate the seasonal variability of mode‐1 M2 internal tides from the Luzon Strait. The 25 years of SSH data are divided into four seasonal subsets, from which four seasonal internal tide models are constructed following the same mapping procedure. Climatological seasonal hydrography in the World Ocean Atlas 2013 is used to calculate two seasonally variable parameters required in the mapping procedure: Wavelength and the transfer function from the SSH amplitude to depth‐integrated energy flux. The M2 internal tides from the Luzon Strait are extracted using propagation direction determined in plane wave analysis. The satellite results show that the westward and eastward M2 internal tides both demonstrate significant seasonal variation. The westward and eastward internal tides seesaw seasonally: The westward internal tides strengthen (weaken) in summer and fall (winter and spring); while the eastward internal tides strengthen (weaken) in winter and spring (summer and fall). We suggest that the seasonal seesaw is mainly determined by ocean stratification and the Kuroshio Current; however, further studies are needed to quantify their relative contributions.

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