have been directed toward understanding and predicting the ISW's characteristics in the northern SCS over the last two decades (Alford et al., 2015;Guo & Chen, 2014). Although the background stratification and current have been found to play important roles in modulating these waves' characteristics and behavior (
A fully nonlinear, nonhydrostatic numerical model is utilized to investigate the generation of Internal Solitary Waves (ISWs) upstream of the Knight Inlet sill. While an upstream hydraulic jump initiates the ISW generation and both hydraulic jump and upstream influence contribute to the generation, it is found that upstream influence is dominant and the hydraulic jump is not necessary for the ultimate generation of ISWs. Decreasing the tidal forcing or upstream sill width may render the flow subcritical (i.e., the hydraulic jump disappears) and ISWs can be generated by nonlinear steepening of long wave disturbances induced by upstream influence. Increasing the tidal forcing or upstream sill width may generate a hydraulic jump blocking strong upstream propagating disturbances. The jump subsequently becomes a turbulent bore and later disperses into a train of ISWs as the tide relaxes. Further increase in the tidal forcing may sweep the turbulent bore downstream and a train of ISWs is emitted upstream toward the end of waning tide. By reducing the stratification strength by 1 order of magnitude, the near‐sill flow is in the transcritical regime and ISWs are resonantly generated over the lee side slope. Connections to the internal tide release mechanism at Luzon Strait and to the unsteady lee wave model are also discussed. The present work provides some more insights into the ISW generation process at Knight Inlet and the connection between the generation mechanism at Knight Inlet and that at Luzon Strait is identified.
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