The Caribbean Sea apparently whistles, as per a new study.
A
strange noise emanating from the Caribbean Sea has reportedly been
detected by researchers from UK's University of Liverpool. The sound,
which was found to be similar to a whistle, was so remarkable that it
could be picked up from space, even though it was too low to be
initially caught by human ears on our planet's surface.
The scientists
heard the sound when conducting a research about regional sea level and
pressure changes, especially in the Caribbean Sea owing to its
significant role in creating currents that feed into the Gulf Stream.
The team soon realized there was something mysterious going on when they
noticed pressure oscillations in their study model which did not seem
quite right.
The scientists zeroed in on the
oscillations and realized that they emanated a low noise, which could
only be described as a whistle. The whistle's pitch was so strong that
it could be measured in space by observing the oscillations on Earth's
gravity field. The further study of the effect led the scientists to
understand that the sound was actually a Rossby Wave, a phenomenon that
moves west on the ocean, and reaches the Caribbean basin, where it
disappears for 120 days and then reappears again to make the journey
back to the east of the ocean. The researchers attributed the mysterious
whistle of the sea floor to the Rossby Wave.
"An ocean current flowing through the
Caribbean Sea becomes unstable and excites a resonance of a rather
strange kind of ocean wave called a Rossby wave," said
Chris Hughes, from the researching team. "Because the Caribbean Sea is
partly open, this causes an exchange of water with the rest of the ocean
which allows us to 'hear' the resonance using gravity measurements".
Incidentally the note of the wave is in
A-flat tone, which is around 30 octaves lower than a piano's lowest
note. Furthermore, the researchers believe that the "Rossby Whistle" is
actually impacting the flow of the Caribbean current and subsequently
the whole North Atlantic Ocean. The team now wants to study more about
the effect of the Rossby Whistle, particularly its capability of coastal
flooding prediction.
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