AN INSTABILITY THEORY OF AIR-SEA INTERACTION FOR COASTAL UPWELLING
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Graphical Abstract
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Abstract
A surface wind (seabreeze), thermally generated by differential sea surface temperature, is introduced to Gill-Clarke’s model (1974) through wind stress for investigating the effects of Seabreeze on coastal upwelling. A coupled air-sea system is treated as an eigenvalue problem. The solutions show that the thermally forced local winds break down the coastal Kelvin wave into three parts: small-scale (L200 km) coastal Kelvin modes. The consistency of the length scale between the most growing mode predicted by this model and the observed cold/warm alternation pattern of surface water near the Peruvian Coast (around 15oS) implies that Seabreeze may play some role in coastal upwelling.
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