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Study of the Kuroshio/Ryukyu Current system based on satellite-altimeter and <Emphasis Type="Italic">in situ</Emphasis> measurements
Authors:Magdalena Andres  Jae-Hun Park  Mark Wimbush  Xiao-Hua Zhu  Kyung-Il Chang  Hiroshi Ichikawa
Institution:1.Graduate School of Oceanography,University of Rhode Island,Narragansett,USA;2.State Key Laboratory of Satellite Ocean Environment Dynamics, Second Institute of Oceanography,State Oceanic Administration,Hangzhou,China;3.Research Institute of Oceanography/School of Earth and Environmental Sciences,Seoul National University,Seoul,Korea;4.Institute of Observational Research for Global Change,Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology,Kanagawa,Japan
Abstract:Data from satellite altimeters and from a 13-month deployment of in situ instruments are used to determine an empirical relationship between sea-level anomaly difference (SLA) across the Kuroshio in the East China Sea (ECS-Kuroshio) and net transport near 28°N. Applying this relationship to the altimeter data, we obtain a 12-year time series of ECS-Kuroshio transport crossing the C-line (KT). The resulting mean transport is 18.7 ± 0.2 Sv with 1.8 Sv standard deviation. This KT is compared with a similarly-determined time series of net Ryukyu Current transport crossing the O-line near 26°N southeast of Okinawa (RT). Their mean sum (24 Sv) is less than the mean predicted Sverdrup transport. These KT and RT mean-flow estimates form a consistent pattern with historical estimates of other mean flows in the East China Sea/Philippine Basin region. While mean KT is larger than mean RT by a factor of 3.5, the amplitude of the KT annual cycle is only half that of RT. At the 95% confidence level the transports are coherent at periods of about 2 years and 100–200 days, with RT leading KT by about 60 days in each case. At the annual period, the transports are coherent at the 90% confidence level with KT leading RT by 4–5 months. While the bulk of the Kuroshio enters the ECS through the channel between Taiwan and Yonaguni-jima, analysis of satellite altimetry maps, together with the transport time series, indicates that the effect of mesoscale eddies is transmitted to the ECS via the Kerama Gap southwest of Okinawa. Once the effect of these eddies is felt by the ECS-Kuroshio at 28°N, it is advected rapidly to the Tokara Strait.
Keywords:Kuroshio  Ryukyu Current  volume transport  East China Sea  Tokara Strait  Kerama Gap  eddies  inverted echo sounder  ADCP  satellite altimeter
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