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Oceanic Internal Waves and Internal Tides in the East Asian Marginal Seas

Oceanic Internal Waves and Internal Tides in the East Asian Marginal Seas

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Oceanic internal waves (IWs) at frequencies from local inertial (e.g., near-inertial internal waves) to buoyancy frequencies (nonlinear internal waves or internal solitary waves), sometimes including diurnal and semidiurnal tidal frequencies, play an important role in redistributing heat, momentum, materials, and energy via turbulent mixing. IWs are found ubiquitously in many seas, including East Asian marginal seas (Indonesian Seas, South China Sea, East China Sea, Yellow Sea, and East Sea or Japan Sea), significantly affecting underwater acoustics, coastal and offshore engineering, submarine navigation, biological productivity, and the local and global climate. Despite decades of study on the IWs in some regions, our understanding of the IWs in the East Asian marginal seas is still in a primitive state and the mechanisms underlying every stage (generation, propagation, evolution, and dissipation) of IWs are not always clear. This Special Issue includes papers related to all fields of both low- and high-frequency IW studies in the specified region, including remote sensing, in situ observations, theories, and numerical models.

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Keywords

  • Bali Sea
  • baroclinic tides
  • East China Sea
  • extreme current velocity
  • flow noise
  • Hainan Island
  • History of engineering & technology
  • hybrid coordinate ocean model reanalysis results
  • internal solitary wave
  • internal solitary waves
  • internal waves
  • Japan Sea
  • KRI nanggala-402 submarine wreck
  • Lombok Strait
  • Luzon Strait
  • mesoscale flow field
  • MITgcm
  • moored observation
  • n/a
  • near-inertial internal waves
  • near-inertial waves
  • nonlinear internal wave
  • nonseasonal variability
  • Okubo-Weiss parameter
  • propagating direction
  • propagating speed
  • relative vorticity
  • remote sensing images
  • shipboard observation
  • South China Sea
  • southwestern East Sea
  • stratification variability
  • subsurface mooring
  • Technology, engineering, agriculture
  • Technology: general issues
  • the South China Sea
  • trapped core
  • typhoon Megi
  • underwater noise
  • underway observation
  • vortex-induced vibration
  • wave breaking

Links

DOI: 10.3390/books978-3-0365-4214-0

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