Abstract
Freshwater from rivers influences Indian summer monsoon rainfall and
tropical cyclones by stratifying the upper layer and warming the
subsurface ocean in the Bay of Bengal. Here, we use {\it
in situ} and satellite data with reanalysis to showcase how river water
experiences a significant increase in salinity on sub-seasonal
timescales. This involves the trapping and homogenization of freshwater
by a cyclonic eddy in the Bay. Using a specific example from 2015, river
water is shown to enter an eddy along its attracting manifolds within a
period of two weeks. This leads to the formation of a highly stratified
subsurface layer within the eddy. When freshest, the eddy has the
largest sea-level anomaly, spins fastest, and supports strong lateral
gradients in salinity. Subsequently, observations reveal a progressive
increase in salinity inside the eddy within a month. In particular,
salty water spirals in, and freshwater is pulled out across the eddy
boundary. Lagrangian experiments elucidate this process, whereby
horizontal chaotic mixing provides a mechanism for the rapid increase in
surface salinity. A salinity budget also suggests that horizontal
advection explains much of the change in mixed layer salinity. Further,
the adjustment of this freshwater eddy triggers submesoscale dynamics
which appear to be an integral part of the process of salinity
homogenization. This pathway is distinct from vertical diffusive mixing
and is likely to be important for the evolution of salinity in the Bay
of Bengal.