4.3 Article

Seasonal pathways of the Tsugaru Warm Current revealed by high-frequency ocean radars

Journal

JOURNAL OF OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 78, Issue 2, Pages 103-119

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10872-022-00631-y

Keywords

Tsugaru Warm Current; Seasonal variability; Coastal mode; Bathymetry; Sill

Categories

Funding

  1. Sasakawa Scientific Research Grant from the Japan Science Society [2019-2038]
  2. Collaborative Research Program of Research Institute for Applied Mechanics, Kyushu University
  3. Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University

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In this study, the seasonal pathway of the Tsugaru Warm Current (TWC) was investigated using high-frequency ocean radar data. The TWC was found to flow along the center of Tsugaru strait during summer and move to the southern coast during winter. These pathways are associated with seasonal outflow modes known as Gyre mode and Coastal mode. The seasonal changes in current velocity are well correlated with changes in sea level difference between Fukaura and Hakodate. The presence of a shallow sill on the southern coast further intensifies and widens the Coastal mode.
Seasonal pathway of the Tsugaru Warm Current (TWC), coastal boundary current flowing eastward from the Sea of Japan to the North Pacific Ocean, is investigated using data of surface currents measured by high-frequency ocean radars for the period 2014-2020. The TWC takes a pathway along the center of Tsugaru strait during summer season (41.64oN), while during winter season the TWC moves to south to flow along the southern coast (41.55oN). These pathways are associated with seasonal outflow modes known as Gyre mode and Coastal mode, respectively. Seasonal changes in current velocity, characterized by intensified flow in summer and autumn seasons and weakened flow in winter season, are well correlated with seasonal changes of sea level difference between Fukaura and Hakodate. However, this clear relationship is not seen at the eastern exit of the strait (141.5oE). There is a shallow sill that extends northward from the southern coast. HFR further reveals that Coastal mode is locally intensified and widened when passing through this sill. These TWC's responses are qualitatively explained by mass conservation for barotropic flow that flows in a horizontal two-dimensional channel with sea floor depth change. These responses over the sill are not seen during Gyre mode because the northward shift keeps the pathway away from the sill. During the Coastal mode, there are some cases in which the TWC does not ride on the sill but takes a pathway around the sill. Such patterns are seen when the TWC is weak, thus a weak Coastal mode.

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