Abstract

Abstract The outflow from the Indonesian seas empties approximately 5–7 Sv of surface warm (and low salinity) Indonesian Throughflow water into the southern Indian Ocean (at roughly 12°S). Using a nonlinear 1½-layer model with a simple geometry consisting of a point source (of anomalous water) situated along a meridional wall on a β plane, the spreading of these waters is examined. An analytical solution is constructed with the aid of the “slowly varying” approach, and process-oriented numerical simulations are performed. It is found that, immediately after emptying into the ocean, the outflow splits into two branches. One branch carries approximately 13% of the source mass flux and forms a chain of high amplitude anticyclonic eddies (lenses) immediately to the west of the source. These eddies drift westward and penetrate into the interior of the Indian Ocean. The second branch carries the remaining 87% of the mass flux via a coastal southward flowing current. Ultimately, this second branch separates from the coast and turns westward. (A detailed examination of this second branch separation is, nevertheless, beyond the scope of this study.) It is suggested that the eddies recently observed to the west of the Island of Timor are a result of the above eddy generation process, which is not related to the classical eddy generation process associated with instabilities (i.e., the breakdown of a known steady solution). It is also suggested that this new nonlinear process explains why some of the Indonesian Throughflow water forms the source of the southward flowing coastal Leeuwin Current.

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