ASIRI: An Ocean–Atmosphere Initiative for Bay of Bengal
Author(s)
Wijesekera, Hemantha W.; Shroyer, Emily; Tandon, Amit; Ravichandran, M.; Sengupta, Debasis; Jinadasa, S. U. P.; Fernando, Harindra J. S.; Agrawal, Neeraj; Arulananthan, K.; Bhat, G. S.; Baumgartner, Mark; Buckley, Jared; Centurioni, Luca; Conry, Patrick; Gordon, Arnold L.; Hormann, Verena; Jarosz, Ewa; Jensen, Tommy G.; Johnston, Shaun; Lankhorst, Matthias; Lee, Craig M.; Leo, Laura S.; Lozovatsky, Iossif; Lucas, Andrew J.; Mackinnon, Jennifer; Nash, Jonathan; Omand, Melissa M.; Pham, Hieu; Pinkel, Robert; Rainville, Luc; Ramachandran, Sanjiv; Rudnick, Daniel L.; Sarkar, Sutanu; Send, Uwe; Sharma, Rashmi; Simmons, Harper; Stafford, Kathleen M.; St. Laurent, Louis; Venayagamoorthy, Karan; Venkatesan, Ramasamy; Teague, William J.; Wang, David W.; Waterhouse, Amy F.; Weller, Robert; Whalen, Caitlin B.; Farrar, John Thomas; Mahadevan, Amala; ... Show more Show less
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Air–Sea Interactions in the Northern Indian Ocean (ASIRI) is an international research effort (2013–17) aimed at understanding and quantifying coupled atmosphere–ocean dynamics of the Bay of Bengal (BoB) with relevance to Indian Ocean monsoons. Working collaboratively, more than 20 research institutions are acquiring field observations coupled with operational and high-resolution models to address scientific issues that have stymied the monsoon predictability. ASIRI combines new and mature observational technologies to resolve submesoscale to regional-scale currents and hydrophysical fields. These data reveal BoB’s sharp frontal features, submesoscale variability, low-salinity lenses and filaments, and shallow mixed layers, with relatively weak turbulent mixing. Observed physical features include energetic high-frequency internal waves in the southern BoB, energetic mesoscale and submesoscale features including an intrathermocline eddy in the central BoB, and a high-resolution view of the exchange along the periphery of Sri Lanka, which includes the 100-km-wide East India Coastal Current (EICC) carrying low-salinity water out of the BoB and an adjacent, broad northward flow (∼300 km wide) that carries high-salinity water into BoB during the northeast monsoon. Atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) observations during the decaying phase of the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) permit the study of multiscale atmospheric processes associated with non-MJO phenomena and their impacts on the marine boundary layer. Underway analyses that integrate observations and numerical simulations shed light on how air–sea interactions control the ABL and upper-ocean processes.
Date issued
2016-10Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences; Woods Hole Oceanographic InstitutionJournal
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Citation
Wijesekera, Hemantha W. et al. “ASIRI: An Ocean–Atmosphere Initiative for Bay of Bengal.” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 97, no. 10 (October2016): 1859–1884. © 2016 American Meteorological Society
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0003-0007
1520-0477