scholarly journals Identifying and Characterizing Subsurface Tropical Instability Waves in the Atlantic Ocean in Simulations and Observations

Author(s):  
Mia Sophie Specht ◽  
Johann Jungclaus ◽  
Jürgen Bader
Ocean Science ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. V. Caltabiano ◽  
I. S. Robinson ◽  
L. P. Pezzi

Abstract. Instability waves in the tropical Atlantic Ocean are analysed by microwave satellite-based data spanning from 1998 to 2001. This is the first multi-year observational study of the sea surface temperature (SST) signature of the Tropical Instability Waves (TIW) in the region. SST data were used to show that the waves spectral characteristics vary from year-to-year. They also vary on each latitude north of the equator, with the region of 1° N, 15° W concentrating the largest variability when the time series is averaged along the years. Analyses of wind components show that meridional winds are more affected near the equator and 1° N, while zonal winds are more affected further north at around 3° N and 4° N. Concurrent observations of SST, wind, atmospheric water vapour, liquid cloud water, precipitation rates and wind were used to suggest the possible influence of these waves on the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). It seems that these instabilities have a large impact on the ITCZ due to its proximity of the equator, compared to its Pacific counterpart, and the geography of the tropical Atlantic basin. These analyses also suggest that the air-sea coupling mechanism suggested by Wallace can also be applied to the tropical Atlantic region.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mia Sophie Specht ◽  
Johann Jungclaus ◽  
Jürgen Bader

<div> <p><span>Tropical instability waves (TIWs) near the ocean surface are present in all tropical oceans and are known to be important for air-sea interactions and regional climate variability. Recent studies based on observations in the Pacific Ocean found that apart from TIWs at the surface, there also exist subsurface TIWs (subTIWs) which can alter vertical mixing. To date, most studies have focused on TIW related dynamics near the ocean surface. However, to properly assess vertical mixing in the upper ocean, improved understanding of the vertical structure of TIWs and the influence of subTIWs is needed. In this study, </span>we show subTIW<span> presence</span> in the Atlantic Ocean for the first time using mooring observations.<span>Further, we characterize subTIWs in the tropical Atlantic Ocean with a special focus on subTIW spatial and temporal variability and their effect on mixing. For this, data covering almost two decades are used that were generated from a comprehensive, global, high-resolution ocean model forced by the reanalysis ERA5. We find subTIWs between 40 m depth and the thermocline in both model and observations and unlike TIWs, subTIWs are frequently active both north and south of the Equator. The results of our study suggest that subTIWs induce a multi-layer shear structure which has the potential to destabilize the mean flow and thereby cause mixing. These effects are strongest north of the Equator where TIWs and subTIWs act simultaneously, implying possible TIW/subTIW interactions. </span>We conclude that subTIWs are a feature of the tropical Atlantic Ocean with regionally varying implications for vertical mixing and heat fluxes. <span>In addition, subTIWs differ from TIWs in their temporal and regional occurrences Therefore, subTIWs should be considered in </span>f<span>u</span>ture assessments of upper ocean dynamics, particularly in subTIW dominated regions.</p> </div>


2004 ◽  
Vol 7 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 145-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Jochum ◽  
Paola Malanotte-Rizzoli ◽  
Antonio Busalacchi

2007 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 765-771 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Jochum ◽  
Clara Deser ◽  
Adam Phillips

Abstract Atmospheric general circulation model experiments are conducted to quantify the contribution of internal oceanic variability in the form of tropical instability waves (TIWs) to interannual wind and rainfall variability in the tropical Pacific. It is found that in the tropical Pacific, along the equator, and near 25°N and 25°S, TIWs force a significant increase in wind and rainfall variability from interseasonal to interannual time scales. Because of the stochastic nature of TIWs, this means that climate models that do not take them into account will underestimate the strength and number of extreme events and may overestimate forecast capability.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (12) ◽  
pp. 2851-2865 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franz Philip Tuchen ◽  
Peter Brandt ◽  
Martin Claus ◽  
Rebecca Hummels

AbstractBesides the zonal flow that dominates the seasonal and long-term variability in the equatorial Atlantic, energetic intraseasonal meridional velocity fluctuations are observed in large parts of the water column. We use 15 years of partly full-depth velocity data from an equatorial mooring at 23°W to investigate intraseasonal variability and specifically the downward propagation of intraseasonal energy from the near-surface into the deep ocean. Between 20 and 50 m, intraseasonal variability at 23°W peaks at periods between 30 and 40 days. It is associated with westward-propagating tropical instability waves, which undergo an annual intensification in August. At deeper levels down to about 2000 m considerable intraseasonal energy is still observed. A frequency–vertical mode decomposition reveals that meridional velocity fluctuations are more energetic than the zonal ones for periods < 50 days. The energy peak at 30–40 days and at vertical modes 2–5 excludes equatorial Rossby waves and suggests Yanai waves to be associated with the observed intraseasonal energy. Yanai waves that are considered to be generated by tropical instability waves propagate their energy from the near-surface west of 23°W downward and eastward to eventually reach the mooring location. The distribution of intraseasonal energy at the mooring position depends largely on the dominant frequency and the time, depth, and longitude of excitation, while the dominant vertical mode of the Yanai waves plays only a minor role. Observations also show the presence of weaker intraseasonal variability at 23°W below 2000 m that cannot be associated with tropical instability waves.


2005 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. V. Caltabiano ◽  
I. S. Robinson ◽  
L. P. Pezzi

Abstract. Instability waves in the tropical Atlantic Ocean are analysed by microwave satellite-based data spanning from 1998 to 2001. This is the first multi-year observational study of these waves in the region. Sea surface temperature (SST) data were used to show that the waves spectral characteristics vary from year-to-year. They also vary on each latitude north of the equator, with the region of 1° N, 15° W concentrating the largest variability when the time series is averaged along the years. Analyses of wind components show that meridional winds are more affected near the equator and 1° N, while zonal winds are more affected further north at around 3° N and 4° N. Concurrent observations of SST, wind, atmospheric water vapour, liquid cloud water, precipitation rates and wind were used to demonstrate the possible influence of these waves on the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). It seems that these instabilities have a large impact on the ITCZ due to its proximity of the equator, compared to its Pacific counterpart, and the geography of the tropical Atlantic basin. These analyses also suggest that the air-sea coupling mechanism suggested by Wallace can also be applied to the tropical Atlantic region.


2003 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jérôme Vialard ◽  
Christophe Menkes ◽  
David L. T. Anderson ◽  
Magdalena Alonso Balmaseda

2009 ◽  
Vol 137 (6) ◽  
pp. 2021-2046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong-Hua Zhang ◽  
Antonio J. Busalacchi

Abstract High-resolution space-based observations reveal significant two-way air–sea interactions associated with tropical instability waves (TIWs); their roles in budgets of heat, salt, momentum, and biogeochemical fields in the tropical oceans have been recently demonstrated. However, dynamical model-based simulations of the atmospheric response to TIW-induced sea surface temperature (SSTTIW) perturbations remain a great challenge because of the limitation in spatial resolution and realistic representations of the related processes in the atmospheric planetary boundary layer (PBL) and their interactions with the overlying free troposphere. Using microwave remote sensing data, an empirical model is derived to depict wind stress perturbations induced by TIW-related SST forcing in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Wind data are based on space–time blending of Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) Direction Interval Retrieval with Thresholded Nudging (DIRTH) satellite observations and NCEP analysis fields; SST data are from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Microwave Imager (TMI). These daily data are first subject to a spatial filter of 12° moving average in the zonal direction to extract TIW-related wind stress (τTIW) and SSTTIW perturbations. A combined singular value decomposition (SVD) analysis is then applied to these zonal high-pass-filtered τTIW and SSTTIW fields. It is demonstrated that the SVD-based analysis technique can effectively extract TIW-induced covariability patterns in the atmosphere and ocean, acting as a filter by passing wind signals that are directly related with the SSTTIW forcing over the TIW active regions. As a result, the empirical model can well represent TIW-induced wind stress responses as revealed directly from satellite measurements (e.g., the structure and phase), but the amplitude can be underestimated significantly. Validation and sensitivity experiments are performed to illustrate the robustness of the empirical τTIW model. Further applications are discussed for taking into account the TIW-induced wind responses and feedback effects that are missing in large-scale climate models and atmospheric reanalysis data, as well as for uncoupled ocean and coupled mesoscale and large-scale air–sea modeling studies.


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