Abstract

AbstractThe seasonal sea level variations observed from tide gauges over 1900–2013 and gridded satellite altimeter product AVISO over 1993–2013 in the northwest Pacific have been explored. The seasonal cycle is able to explain 60–90% of monthly sea level variance in the marginal seas, while it explains less than 20% of variance in the eddy‐rich regions. The maximum annual and semiannual sea level cycles (30 and 6 cm) are observed in the north of the East China Sea and the west of the South China Sea, respectively. AVISO was found to underestimate the annual amplitude by 25% compared to tide gauge estimates along the coasts of China and Russia. The forcing for the seasonal sea level cycle was identified. The atmospheric pressure and the steric height produce 8–12 cm of the annual cycle in the middle continental shelf and in the Kuroshio Current regions separately. The removal of the two attributors from total sea level permits to identify the sea level residuals that still show significant seasonality in the marginal seas. Both nearby wind stress and surface currents can explain well the long‐term variability of the seasonal sea level cycle in the marginal seas and the tropics because of their influence on the sea level residuals. Interestingly, the surface currents are a better descriptor in the areas where the ocean currents are known to be strong. Here, they explain 50–90% of interannual variability due to the strong links between the steric height and the large‐scale ocean currents.

Highlights

  • The seasonal cycle, and its annual and semi-annual components, dominates the non-tidal variability of sea level in many regions of the ocean

  • This paper provides a regional investigation on the seasonal sea level cycle over the northwest Pacific, by using publically accessible datasets, which include tide gauge records, gridded satellite altimetry data and atmospheric and oceanic reanalysis

  • Because the inverted barometer (IB) effect ( ) has been corrected in the 198 AVISO data, we here refer to the monthly sea level records from AVISO as −

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Summary

Introduction

The seasonal cycle, and its annual and semi-annual components, dominates the non-tidal variability of sea level in many regions of the ocean. On the basis of tide gauge data, Tsimplis and Woodworth [1994] mapped the features of the seasonal sea level cycle in coastal waters, showing spatial variability and regional coherence. This paper provides a regional investigation on the seasonal sea level cycle over the northwest Pacific, by using publically accessible datasets, which include tide gauge records, gridded satellite altimetry data and atmospheric and oceanic reanalysis.

Sea level observational records
Atmospheric pressure data and the IB effect
Ocean temperature and salinity analysis and the steric height
Ocean reanalysis SODA
Regression model for seasonal cycle
Seasonal sea level cycle from observations
Mean seasonal sea level cycle
Temporal variability of the seasonal sea level cycle
The IB effect and the steric height
Impacts from the wind stress and the sea surface currents
Findings
Conclusions
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