Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow

The Mozambique Channel is an important link in the thermohaline circulation, as the variability in its throughflow affects the exchange between the Indian and South Atlantic Ocean south of Africa. In this dissertation, we study the variability of the Mozambique Channel throughflow in the range from...

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Main Author: van der Werf, P.M.
Other Authors: Marine and Atmospheric Research, Dep Natuurkunde, de Ruijter, W, van Leeuwen, Peter
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Utrecht University 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/37461
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spelling ftunivutrecht:oai:dspace.library.uu.nl:1874/37461 2023-07-23T04:21:46+02:00 Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow van der Werf, P.M. Marine and Atmospheric Research Dep Natuurkunde de Ruijter, W van Leeuwen, Peter 2010-01-18 text/plain https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/37461 other unknown Utrecht University https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/37461 info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess Dissertation 2010 ftunivutrecht 2023-07-01T23:38:16Z The Mozambique Channel is an important link in the thermohaline circulation, as the variability in its throughflow affects the exchange between the Indian and South Atlantic Ocean south of Africa. In this dissertation, we study the variability of the Mozambique Channel throughflow in the range from eddy to interannual time scales and investigate the origin of this variability. A 4.2-year time series obtained by a mooring array in the Mozambique Channel at 17S was the main object of study, together with output from (Ocean General Circulation) models and satellite observations. Over the length of the observational time series, the mean volume transport 16.7 Sv southward, with daily values ranging between 45 Sv northward and 65 Sv southward. The throughflow is highly variable on a large range of time scales. Interannual variability was observed both in the volume transport and subsurface salinity in the Mozambique Channel. The amplitude of these variations was large, in the order of 9 Sv for the transport time series and about 0.2 PSU for a salinity anomaly. The interannual variability of the transport time series has a dominant period of two years. This signal is related to the Indian Ocean Dipole index and is transported via the South Equatorial Current. A negative phase of the dipole induces an increase of the southward transport in the Mozambique Channel with a lag of roughly one year. The salinity anomaly in the years 2000 – 2001 is related to the weakening of the northern part of the South Equatorial Current. This results in a reduced inflow of tropical, relatively fresh waters. The seasonal cycle of the transport has an amplitude of about 5 Sv and originates from upstream variability in the wind forcing west of the Mascarene Ridge. In the observations, this signal is overshadowed by variability at other frequencies. In Ocean General Circulation Models on the other hand, this frequency dominates the throughflow, as these models underrepresent variability at other, especially higher, frequencies. Variability ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis South Atlantic Ocean Utrecht University Repository Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Utrecht University Repository
op_collection_id ftunivutrecht
language unknown
description The Mozambique Channel is an important link in the thermohaline circulation, as the variability in its throughflow affects the exchange between the Indian and South Atlantic Ocean south of Africa. In this dissertation, we study the variability of the Mozambique Channel throughflow in the range from eddy to interannual time scales and investigate the origin of this variability. A 4.2-year time series obtained by a mooring array in the Mozambique Channel at 17S was the main object of study, together with output from (Ocean General Circulation) models and satellite observations. Over the length of the observational time series, the mean volume transport 16.7 Sv southward, with daily values ranging between 45 Sv northward and 65 Sv southward. The throughflow is highly variable on a large range of time scales. Interannual variability was observed both in the volume transport and subsurface salinity in the Mozambique Channel. The amplitude of these variations was large, in the order of 9 Sv for the transport time series and about 0.2 PSU for a salinity anomaly. The interannual variability of the transport time series has a dominant period of two years. This signal is related to the Indian Ocean Dipole index and is transported via the South Equatorial Current. A negative phase of the dipole induces an increase of the southward transport in the Mozambique Channel with a lag of roughly one year. The salinity anomaly in the years 2000 – 2001 is related to the weakening of the northern part of the South Equatorial Current. This results in a reduced inflow of tropical, relatively fresh waters. The seasonal cycle of the transport has an amplitude of about 5 Sv and originates from upstream variability in the wind forcing west of the Mascarene Ridge. In the observations, this signal is overshadowed by variability at other frequencies. In Ocean General Circulation Models on the other hand, this frequency dominates the throughflow, as these models underrepresent variability at other, especially higher, frequencies. Variability ...
author2 Marine and Atmospheric Research
Dep Natuurkunde
de Ruijter, W
van Leeuwen, Peter
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author van der Werf, P.M.
spellingShingle van der Werf, P.M.
Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow
author_facet van der Werf, P.M.
author_sort van der Werf, P.M.
title Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow
title_short Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow
title_full Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow
title_fullStr Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow
title_full_unstemmed Variability of the Mozambique Channel Throughflow
title_sort variability of the mozambique channel throughflow
publisher Utrecht University
publishDate 2010
url https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/37461
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre South Atlantic Ocean
genre_facet South Atlantic Ocean
op_relation https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/37461
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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