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Upper ocean response to tropical cyclones: a review

Han Zhang, Hailun He, Wen‐Zhou Zhang, Di Tian

2021Geoscience Letters166 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Tropical cyclones (TCs) are strong natural hazards that are important for local and global air–sea interactions. This manuscript briefly reviews the knowledge about the upper ocean responses to TCs, including the current, surface wave, temperature, salinity and biological responses. TCs usually cause upper ocean near-inertial currents, increase strong surface waves, cool the surface ocean, warm subsurface ocean, increase sea surface salinity and decrease subsurface salinity, causing plankton blooms. The upper ocean response to TCs is controlled by TC-induced mixing, advection and surface flux, which usually bias to the right (left) side of the TC track in the Northern (Southern) Hemisphere. The upper ocean response usually recovers in several days to several weeks. The characteristics of the upper ocean response mainly depend on the TC parameters (e.g. TC intensity, translation speed and size) and environmental parameters (e.g. ocean stratification and eddies). In recent decades, our knowledge of the upper ocean response to TCs has improved because of the development of observation methods and numerical models. More processes of the upper ocean response to TCs can be studied by researchers in the future.

Topics & Concepts

OceanographyTropical cycloneAdvectionGeologySea surface temperatureMixed layerStratification (seeds)Ocean currentClimatologyThermoclineEddySalinityOcean heat contentHaloclineNorthern HemisphereEnvironmental scienceCurrent (fluid)ArgoMeteorologyGeographyTurbulenceThermodynamicsBiologySeed dormancyGerminationPhysicsBotanyDormancyTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchOcean Waves and Remote SensingOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
Upper ocean response to tropical cyclones: a review | Litcius