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- Title
Observations of Inflow of Philippine Sea Surface Water into the South China Sea through the Luzon Strait.
- Authors
Centurioni, Luca R.; Niiler, Pearn P.; Lee, Dong-kyu
- Abstract
Velocity observations near the surface made with Argos satellite-tracked drifters between 1989 and 2002 provide evidence of seasonal currents entering the South China Sea from the Philippine Sea through the Luzon Strait. The drifters cross the strait and reach the interior of the South China Sea only between October and January, with ensemble mean speeds of 0.7 ± 0.4 m s[sup -1] and daily mean westward speeds that can exceed 1.65 m s[sup -1] . The majority of the drifters that continued to reside in the South China Sea made the entry within a westward current system located at ∼20°N that crossed the prevailing northward Kuroshio path. In other seasons, the drifters looped across the strait within the Kuroshio and exited along the south coast of Taiwan. During one intrusion event, satellite altimeters indicated that, directly west of the strait, anticyclonic and cyclonic eddies resided, respectively, north and south of the entering drifter track. The surface currents measured by the crossing drifters were much larger than the Ekman currents that would be produced by an 8–10 m s[sup -1] northeast monsoon, suggesting that a deeper westward current system, as seen in historical watermass analyses, was present.
- Subjects
SOUTH China Sea; PHILIPPINE Sea; OCEAN currents; DRIFTERS; ALTIMETERS; EDDIES; MONSOONS
- Publication
Journal of Physical Oceanography, 2004, Vol 34, Issue 1, p113
- ISSN
0022-3670
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1175/1520-0485(2004)034<0113:OOIOPS>2.0.CO;2