Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Spatio-temporal variability of internal waves in the Caspian Sea
View through CrossRef
<p>Internal waves (IWs) are an intrinsic feature of all density stratified water bodies: oceans, seas, lakes and reservoirs. IWs occur due to various causes. Among them are tides and inertial motions, variations in atmospheric pressure and wind, underwater earthquakes, water flows over bottom topography, anthropogenic factors, etc. In coastal areas of oceans and tidal seas, &#160;IWs induced by tidal currents over shelf edge predominate. Such IWs are well-studied in multiple field, laboratory and numerical experiments. However, the data on IWs in non-tidal seas, such as the Black, Baltic and Caspian Seas, are scarce. Meanwhile, our multi-year satellite observations prove IWs to be quite a characteristic hydrophysical phenomenon of the Caspian Sea. The sea is considered non-tidal because tide height does not exceed 12 cm at the coastline. And yet surface manifestations of IWs are regularly observed in satellite data, both radar and visible. The goal of our study was to reveal spatial, seasonal and interannual variability of IW surface manifestations in the Caspian Sea in the periods of 1999-2012 and 2018-2019 from the analysis of satellite data. All available satellite radar and visible data were used, that is data from ERS1/2 SAR; Envisat ASAR; Sentinel-1A,1B SAR-C; Landsat-4,5 TM; Landsat-7 ETM+; Landsat-8 OLI; Sentinel-2A,2B MSI sensors. During the year, IWs were observed from the beginning of May to mid-September. In certain years, depending on hydrometeorological conditions, such as water heating, wind field, etc., no IWs could be seen in May or September. IWs regularly occur in the east of Middle Caspian and in the northeast of South Caspian. In North Caspian, due to its shallowness and absence of pronounced stratification, IWs are not generated, at least their surface signatures cannot be found in satellite data. In the west of the sea, IWs are scarcely observed, primarily at the beginning of the summer season. IW trains propagate toward the coast, their generation sites are mainly over the depths of 50-200 m.</p><p>According to the available data for the studied periods, the time of the first appearance of IW signatures differs significantly from year to year. For example, in 1999 and 2000 it happened only in July.</p><p>Since no in situ measurements were conducted in the sites of regular IW manifestations, an attempt&#160; was made to establish the dependence of IW occurrence frequency&#160; on seasonal and interannual variations of sea surface temperature, an indirect indicator of the depth of the diurnal or seasonal thermocline, that is where IW were generated. Sea surface temperature was also estimated from satellite data.</p><p>Another issue addressed in the work was the differentiation between the sea surface signatures of IWs in the atmosphere and the sea. The Caspian Sea is known for their close similarity in spatial characteristics.</p><p>The work was carried out with financial support of the Russian Science Foundation grant #19-77-20060.&#160; Processing of satellite data was carried out by Center for Collective Use &#8220;IKI-Monitoring&#8221; with the use of &#8220;See The Sea&#8221; system, that was implemented in frame of Theme &#8220;Monitoring&#8221;, State register No. 01.20.0.2.00164.</p>
Title: Spatio-temporal variability of internal waves in the Caspian Sea
Description:
<p>Internal waves (IWs) are an intrinsic feature of all density stratified water bodies: oceans, seas, lakes and reservoirs.
IWs occur due to various causes.
Among them are tides and inertial motions, variations in atmospheric pressure and wind, underwater earthquakes, water flows over bottom topography, anthropogenic factors, etc.
In coastal areas of oceans and tidal seas, &#160;IWs induced by tidal currents over shelf edge predominate.
Such IWs are well-studied in multiple field, laboratory and numerical experiments.
However, the data on IWs in non-tidal seas, such as the Black, Baltic and Caspian Seas, are scarce.
Meanwhile, our multi-year satellite observations prove IWs to be quite a characteristic hydrophysical phenomenon of the Caspian Sea.
The sea is considered non-tidal because tide height does not exceed 12 cm at the coastline.
And yet surface manifestations of IWs are regularly observed in satellite data, both radar and visible.
The goal of our study was to reveal spatial, seasonal and interannual variability of IW surface manifestations in the Caspian Sea in the periods of 1999-2012 and 2018-2019 from the analysis of satellite data.
All available satellite radar and visible data were used, that is data from ERS1/2 SAR; Envisat ASAR; Sentinel-1A,1B SAR-C; Landsat-4,5 TM; Landsat-7 ETM+; Landsat-8 OLI; Sentinel-2A,2B MSI sensors.
During the year, IWs were observed from the beginning of May to mid-September.
In certain years, depending on hydrometeorological conditions, such as water heating, wind field, etc.
, no IWs could be seen in May or September.
IWs regularly occur in the east of Middle Caspian and in the northeast of South Caspian.
In North Caspian, due to its shallowness and absence of pronounced stratification, IWs are not generated, at least their surface signatures cannot be found in satellite data.
In the west of the sea, IWs are scarcely observed, primarily at the beginning of the summer season.
IW trains propagate toward the coast, their generation sites are mainly over the depths of 50-200 m.
</p><p>According to the available data for the studied periods, the time of the first appearance of IW signatures differs significantly from year to year.
For example, in 1999 and 2000 it happened only in July.
</p><p>Since no in situ measurements were conducted in the sites of regular IW manifestations, an attempt&#160; was made to establish the dependence of IW occurrence frequency&#160; on seasonal and interannual variations of sea surface temperature, an indirect indicator of the depth of the diurnal or seasonal thermocline, that is where IW were generated.
Sea surface temperature was also estimated from satellite data.
</p><p>Another issue addressed in the work was the differentiation between the sea surface signatures of IWs in the atmosphere and the sea.
The Caspian Sea is known for their close similarity in spatial characteristics.
</p><p>The work was carried out with financial support of the Russian Science Foundation grant #19-77-20060.
&#160; Processing of satellite data was carried out by Center for Collective Use &#8220;IKI-Monitoring&#8221; with the use of &#8220;See The Sea&#8221; system, that was implemented in frame of Theme &#8220;Monitoring&#8221;, State register No.
01.
20.
2.
00164.
</p>.
Related Results
Caspian — Black Sea Connection During MIS 5 (Late Pleistocene): Evidences from Drilling Data
Caspian — Black Sea Connection During MIS 5 (Late Pleistocene): Evidences from Drilling Data
Abstract
The Caspian and Black Seas are adjacent inland bodies of water, each with its unique palaeogeographic history. The Black Sea has bee...
Velocity fields in Northern Caspian near Jayik (Ural) river delta
Velocity fields in Northern Caspian near Jayik (Ural) river delta
<p>The Caspian Sea is the largest inland water body on the Earth and a unique object for analysis. It is of great importance for the socioeconomic development of bord...
Intra population polymorphism of Caspian gull (Larus cachinnans) from the North-Western Coast of the Azov Sea (oological aspect)
Intra population polymorphism of Caspian gull (Larus cachinnans) from the North-Western Coast of the Azov Sea (oological aspect)
This study presents the results of a long term study of nesting colonies of the Caspian gull (Larus cachinnans Pallas, 1811) on the islands of the Molochniy Liman and in Obitochnay...
On three types of sea breeze in Qingdao of East China: an observational analysis
On three types of sea breeze in Qingdao of East China: an observational analysis
Our knowledge of sea breeze remains poor in the coastal area of East China, due largely to the high terrain heterogeneity. Five–year (2016–2020) consecutive wind observations from ...
Internal solitons on the Black Sea shelf: observation of waves of record amplitudes
Internal solitons on the Black Sea shelf: observation of waves of record amplitudes
<p>When conducting work in the fall of 2015 on the Black Sea northeast shelf, we recorded internal waves, the unusualness of which attracts special attention for the ...
Evolutionary relations and population differentiation of Acipenser gueldenstaedtii Brandt, Acipenser persicus Borodin, and Acipenser baerii Brandt
Evolutionary relations and population differentiation of Acipenser gueldenstaedtii Brandt, Acipenser persicus Borodin, and Acipenser baerii Brandt
Russian (
Acipenser gueldenstaedtii
), Persian (
A. persicus
) and Siberian (
A....
First Long-Term Measurements on Kazakhstan Shelf of the Caspian Sea Reveal Alternating Currents and Energetic Temperature Variability
First Long-Term Measurements on Kazakhstan Shelf of the Caspian Sea Reveal Alternating Currents and Energetic Temperature Variability
Moored near-bottom current velocity and water temperature measurements were performed during a period of 194 days (from October 2022 through April 2023) with a 15-min sampling rate...
Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision
Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision
This paper describes a generalized axiomatic scale-space theory that makes it possible to derive the notions of linear scale-space, affine Gaussian scale-space and linear spatio-te...

