Sorting Results in Amazon CloudSearch
By default, search results are sorted according to their relevance to the search
            request. A document's relevance score (_score) is based on how often the
            search terms appear in the document compared to how common the term is across all
            documents in the domain. Relevance scores are positive values that can vary widely 
            depending on your data and queries. The scores for each clause in your query are additive, 
            so queries with more clauses will naturally have higher scores than queries with just one or two. 
            If you know what your typical queries will look like, you can do some test queries to get an 
            idea of the range of scores you’re likely to see. 
To change how search results are sorted, you can:
- 
                Use a textorliteralfield to sort results alphabetically. Note that Amazon CloudSearch sorts by Unicode codepoint, so numbers come before letters and uppercase letters come before lowercase letters. Numbers are sorted as strings, not by value; for example, 10 will come before 2.
- 
                Use an intordoublefield to sort results numerically.
- 
                Use a datefield to sort results by date.
- 
                Use a custom expression to sort results. 
To use a field to sort the search results, you must configure the field to be
                SortEnabled. Only single-value fields can be
            SortEnabled—you cannot use the array-type fields for sorting. For
            more information about configuring fields, see configure indexing options.
To use an expression for sorting, you construct a numeric expression using
                int fields, other expressions, a document's relevance score, and
            numeric operators and functions. You can define expressions in your domain
            configuration, or within a search request. For more information about configuring
            expressions, see Configuring Expressions.
Tip
To sort results randomly, you can use a simple _rand
                expression:
/2013-01-01/search?expr.r=_rand&q=test&return=r%2Cplot%2Ctitle&sort=r+desc
This expression is stable, which lets you page back and forth without losing the
                initial, randomized sort. If you want to use a different randomized sort, you can
                add a-z and 0-9 characters after the _rand
                value, such as:
/2013-01-01/search?expr.r=_rand1a2b3c&q=test&return=r%2Cplot%2Ctitle&sort=r+desc
You use the sort parameter to specify the field or expression you want to
            use to sort the results. You must explicitly specify the sort direction along with the
            name of the field or expression. For example, sort=year asc or
                sort=year desc.
When you use a field for sorting, documents without a value in that field are listed last. If you specify a comma separated list of fields or expressions, the first field or expression is used as the primary sort criteria, the second is used as the secondary sort criteria, and so on.
 If you do not specify the sort parameter, the search results are ranked
            using the documents' default relevance scores with the highest-scoring documents listed
            first. This is equivalent to specifying sort=_score desc. 
You can use the q.options parameter to specify field weights to apply
            when calculating a document's relevance _score. For more information, see
                Using Relative Field Weighting to Customize Text
            Relevance.