Abstract
The eastern Tsugaru Strait is an important area because it is located at
the southwestern boundary of the subarctic gyre in the North Pacific,
and it connects the Pacific Ocean and the Sea of Japan. Combining
continuous monitoring (including fixed-point temperature measurements,
shipboard observations, and high-frequency radar system observations)
with a data-assimilated numerical model (JCOPE2M), we investigated the
processes associated with an event characterized by extremely cold
surface water observed in winter of 2014 at the southeastern side of the
Tsugaru Strait. JCOPE2M outputs reproduce the event closely and reveal a
low-temperature, low-salinity region of water generated from around Cape
Erimo (probably by wind associated with migrating lows passing across
Japan) and propagating from east to west over multiple timescales. This
pattern is interpreted as representing the spreading of Coastal Oyashio
Water (COW; with a density of 26.2 σθ) along the
Hokkaido coast. JCOPE2M outputs also show a subsequent increase in
denser water (26.6–26.8 σθ) inflowing from the
Sea of Japan into the bottom of the strait. The JCOPE2M results also
indicate baroclinic instability in the eastern part of the strait
following the inflow of dense water. The confluence of COW and denser
water is presumed to lead to horizontal exchange, with cold COW riding
up on the denser water, in turn generating the pronounced
cold-surface-water event. Some past cold-water events correspond in
timing to negative anomalies of the West Pacific pattern, which suggests
the important influence of southward shifts in storm-track latitude of
migrating atmospheric lows across Japan.