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Oceanography | Early Online Release

studies considered IGW-IGW interactions to be the dominant

processes. One mechanism, called “induced difusion,” involves

the interaction of near-inertial and tidal IGWs. Induced difu-

sion is thought to be very important in transferring KE across

length scales. However, most studies have not considered

IGW-eddy interactions in the same manner.

Skitka et al. (2024) used a framework to diagnose IGW-eddy

interactions with IGW-IGW interactions in a regional MITgcm

(1/48°) ocean simulation of the North Pacifc. Tey found that

IGW-eddy interactions induce a downscale KE fux in a man-

ner analogous to IGW-IGW interactions. At this grid spacing,

the “eddy-induced difusion” was the dominant mechanism of

energy exchange within the IGW supertidal continuum, and

comparable to the wave-induced difusion achieved by regional

models with 250 m (1/192°) horizontal grid spacing. Tus, fner

vertical and horizontal grid spacing is expected to change the

details of the IGW cascade in simulations, including the mecha-

nisms and rate of energy transfer and its dissipation.

ACOUSTICS

Tidally Forced Simulations and Sound Speed

We frst examined how tidal forcing afects sound speed and

acoustic properties using a series of global HYCOM (1/25°)

simulations with or without tidal (T) forcing and with or with-

out data assimilation (DA), four simulations in all. Each simu-

lation was forced by wind and had 41 layers. Hourly output was

recorded from May to June 2019. Temperature and salinity were

interpolated from the native grid to a uniform 2 m vertical grid

and then used to compute sound speed.

As an initial comparison, the sound speed variability in each

of the four simulations was compared to glider observations

over a small geographic area in the North Pacifc (Figure 5a;

Rudnick, 2016). A mean and standard deviation of sound speed

was computed from May 20 to May 26, using three-hour out-

put from the simulation and averaged over the region covered

by the glider track. Te glider profled from the surface to 500 m

depth roughly every three hours. Although this is not a region

of large tidal energy, the simulations with tidal forcing still had

FIGURE 5. (a) Standard deviation of sound speed for May 20–26, 2019, from Global HYCOM simulations with and without tides and with and without

data assimilation (DA) at the location indicated on the map of the coast of California. Simulations were compared to standard deviation computed from

glider observations over the same week and location. (b,c) The depth of the 1,510 m s–1 sound speed along 20°N, extending from the coast of Hainan

Island eastward (111.16°E–160°E) for global HYCOM simulations. Bathymetry is overlaid on each, with the Luzon Strait located at 1,000 km distance from

the coast. (d,e) SLD and BLG for global HYCOM simulation with tides (Exp 19.0) and for a nonhydrostatic regional MITgcm simulation at the Mascarene

Ridge near the island of Madagascar (see Figure 3b).

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