The Evolution of a Northward-Propagating Buoyant Coastal Plume After a Wind Relaxation Event

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS(2021)

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摘要
After a relaxation of the regional southward, upwelling-favorable winds along the central California coast, warm water from the Santa Barbara Channel propagates northward as a buoyant plume. As the plume transits up the coast, it causes abrupt temperature changes and modifies shelf stratification. We use temperature and velocity data from 35 moorings north of Pt. Arguello to track the evolution of a buoyant plume after a wind relaxation event in October 2017. The moorings were deployed September-October 2017 and span a similar to 30 km stretch of coastline, including nine cross-shelf transects that range from 17 to 100 m water depth. The high spatial resolution of the data set enables us to track the spatiotemporal evolution of the plume, including across-front temperature difference, cross-shore structure, and propagation velocity. We observe an alongshore current velocity signal that takes similar to 10 hr to propagate similar to 25 km alongshore (similar to 0.7 m/s) and a temperature signal that takes similar to 34 hr to propagate the same distance (similar to 0.2 m/s). The plume cools as it transits northward, leading to a decrease in the cross-front temperature difference and the reduced gravity (g'). The plume's propagation velocity is nonuniform in space and time, with accelerations and decelerations unexplained by the alongshore reduction in g' or advection by tidal currents. As the plume reaches the northernmost part of the mooring array, its temperature variability is obscured by internal waves, a prominent feature in the region. We focus on one relaxation event but observe five other similar events over the 2 months record.
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关键词
thermal buoyant plume, inner shelf, propagation speed, wind relaxation, internal waves, coastal dynamics
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