MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF THE LONG-TERM SEA-LEVEL VARIABILITY IN THE BALTIC SEA

Citation
M. Samuelsson et A. Stigebrandt, MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF THE LONG-TERM SEA-LEVEL VARIABILITY IN THE BALTIC SEA, Tellus. Series A, Dynamic meteorology and oceanography, 48(5), 1996, pp. 672-683
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Oceanografhy,"Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences
ISSN journal
02806495
Volume
48
Issue
5
Year of publication
1996
Pages
672 - 683
Database
ISI
SICI code
0280-6495(1996)48:5<672:MCOTLS>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
The horizontal variation of the sea level variability for periods betw een a few days and several years has been investigated using daily mea ns of sea level records obtained along the coasts of Sweden in the per iod 1977-1987. Motions on these periods are forced, either ''externall y'' by the varying sea level outside the mouth and the freshwater supp ly, or ''internally'' by varying air pressure, wind and density in the Baltic Sea. Free, natural oscillations (seiches) of the Baltic Sea ar e generally considered to have periods from two days and shorter, and may thus contribute some variance to the daily means of the sea level and by that to the studied motions. The externally and internally forc ed contributions to the sea level records in the Baltic Sea are separa ted using a model for the externally forced contribution. The external ly forced sea level variations explain most of the variance for period s Longer than one month, and between 50 and 80% of the total sea level variance in the Baltic Sea with maximum in the central parts (the Sto ckholm area). It is also found that for periods shorter than about one month the internally forced oscillations are kinematically similar to those occurring in the first natural seiche mode in a closed Baltic S ea, with maximal variability in the extreme north and south, and minim um in the Stockholm area. For longer periods, however, the internally forced oscillations are kinematically similar to those occurring in an open bay with increasing amplitudes from the mouth and inwards. The s hift in the kinematics of the internally forced oscillations is explai ned by the limited transport capacity of the straits in the mouth for ''high frequency'' motion.