Mean and eddy kinetic energy of the Gulf Stream from multiyear underwater glider surveys

Author(s):  
Robert E. Todd

<p>Subtropical western boundary currents play a key role in ocean energy storage and transport and are characterized by elevated mean and eddy kinetic energy. Due to a lack of spatially broad subsurface observations of velocity, most studies of kinetic energy in western boundary currents have relied on satellite-based estimates of surface geostrophic velocity. Since 2015, Spray autonomous underwater gliders have completed more than 175 crossings of the Gulf Stream distributed over more than 1,500 km in along-stream extent between between Miami, FL (~25°N) and Cape Cod, MA (~40°N). The observations include roughly 14,000 absolute ocean velocity profiles in the upper 1000 m. Novel three-dimensional estimates of mean and eddy kinetic energy are constructed along the western margin of the North Atlantic at 10-m vertical resolution. The horizontal and vertical distributions of mean and eddy kinetic energy are analyzed in light of existing independent estimates and theoretical expectations. Observation-based estimates of mean and eddy-kinetic energy such as these serve as important metrics for validation of global circulation models that must adequately represent western boundary currents.</p>

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcos Fontela ◽  
Fiz F. Pérez ◽  
Herlé Mercier ◽  
Pascale Lherminier

In the North Atlantic, there are two main western boundary currents related to the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC): the Gulf Stream flowing northward and the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC) flowing southward. Here we analyze data from the OVIDE section (GO-SHIP A25 Portugal-Greenland 40–60°N) that crosses the DWBC and the northward extension of the Gulf Stream, the North Atlantic Current. We show that North Atlantic western boundary currents play a key role in the transport of dissolved organic matter, specifically dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Revisited transports and budgets of DOC with new available data identify the eastern Subpolar North Atlantic (eSPNA) as an important source of locally produced organic matter for the North Atlantic and a key region in the supply of bioavailable DOC to the deep ocean. The East Greenland Current, and its upstream source the East Reykjanes Ridge Current on the eastern flank of the mid-Atlantic ridge, are export pathways of bioavailable DOC toward subtropical latitudes. The fast overturning and subsequent remineralization of DOC produced in the autotrophic eSPNA explains up to 38% of the total oxygen consumption in the deep North Atlantic between the OVIDE section and 24°N. Carbon budgets that do not take into account this organic remineralization process overestimates the natural uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere by one third. The inclusion of DOC transports in regional carbon budgets reconciles the estimates of CO2 uptake in the North Atlantic between model and observations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (10) ◽  
pp. 2283-2303 ◽  
Author(s):  
René Schubert ◽  
Arne Biastoch ◽  
Meghan F. Cronin ◽  
Richard J. Greatbatch

AbstractBenthic storms are important for both the energy budget of the ocean and for sediment resuspension and transport. Using 30 years of output from a high-resolution model of the North Atlantic, it is found that most of the benthic storms in the model occur near the western boundary in association with the Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic Current, in regions that are generally collocated with the peak near-bottom eddy kinetic energy. A common feature is meander troughs in the near-surface jets that are accompanied by deep low pressure anomalies spinning up deep cyclones with near-bottom velocities of up to more than 0.5 m s−1. A case study of one of these events shows the importance of both baroclinic and barotropic instability of the jet, with energy being extracted from the jet in the upstream part of the meander trough and partly returned to the jet in the downstream part of the meander trough. This motivates examining the 30-yr time mean of the energy transfer from the (annual mean) background flow into the eddy kinetic energy. This quantity is shown to be collocated well with the region in which benthic storms and large increases in deep cyclonic relative vorticity occur most frequently, suggesting an important role for mixed barotropic–baroclinic instability-driven cyclogenesis in generating benthic storms throughout the model simulation. Regions of the largest energy transfer and most frequent benthic storms are found to be the Gulf Stream west of the New England Seamounts and the North Atlantic Current near Flemish Cap.


Here, I employed the shelf properties and sizes of different basins and introduced the Sun-Moon gravitation into the dynamical equations to dynamically explain the differences existing in the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio systems. In addition to the classic western-boundary intensification of the western boundary currents that fails to explain why the differences in currents and ENSO significance exist among different oceans, shelf properties and sizes of different basins may produce another westernboundary intensification of the western boundary currents under the Sun-Moon gravitation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nour-Eddine Omrani ◽  
Fumiaki Ogawa ◽  
Hisashi Nakamura ◽  
Noel Keenlyside ◽  
Sandro Lubis ◽  
...  

<p>Semi-idealized Atmospheric General Circulation-Model (AGCM) experiments are used, in order to study the different aspects of the hemisphere-scale wintertime troposphere/stratosphere-coupled circulation that are maintained by the North Atlantic and Pacific Ocean Western Boundary Currents (OWBCs). Here we show that the North Atlantic and Pacific OWBCs jointly maintain and shape the wintertime hemispheric circulation and its leading mode of variability Northern Annular Mode (NAM). The OWBCs energize baroclinic waves that reinforce quasi-annular hemispheric structure in the tropospheric eddy-driven jetstreams and NAM variability. Without the OWBCs, the wintertime NAM variability is much weaker and its impact on the continental and maritime surface climate is largely insignificant. Atmospheric energy redistribution caused by the OWBCs acts to damp the near-surface atmospheric baroclinicity and compensates the associated oceanic meridional energy transport in agreement with the Bjerknes compensation. Furthermore, the OWBCs substantially weaken the wintertime stratospheric polar vortex by enhancing the upward planetary wave propagation, and thereby affecting both stratospheric and tropospheric NAM-annularity. It is shown that the impact of OWBCs on northern hemisphere circulation has significant implication for stratosphere/troposphere dynamical coupling, time-scales on the NAM, frequency of Sudden stratospheric warming and potential formation of polar stratospheric clouds.</p><p> </p><p>Reference:</p><p>Omrani et al., 2019: Key Role of the ocean Western Boundary currents in shaping the Northern Hemisphere climate, Scientific Reports, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-39392-y</p><p> </p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (11) ◽  
pp. 2063-2079 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Pierini ◽  
Pierpaolo Falco ◽  
Giovanni Zambardino ◽  
Thomas A. McClimans ◽  
Ingrid Ellingsen

Abstract Various dynamical aspects of nonlinear western boundary currents (WBCs) have been investigated experimentally through physical modeling in a 5-m-diameter rotating basin. The motion of a piston with a velocity up that can be as low as up = 0.5 mm s−1 induces a horizontally unsheared current of homogeneous water that, flowing over a topographic beta slope, experiences westward intensification. First, the character of WBCs for various degrees of nonlinearity is investigated. By varying up, flows ranging from the highly nonlinear inertial Charney regime down to a weakly nonlinear regime can be simulated. In the first case, the dependence of zonal length scales on up is found to be in agreement with Charney’s theory; for weaker flows, a markedly different functional dependence emerges describing the initial transition toward the linear, viscous case. This provides an unprecedented coverage of nonlinear WBC dependence on an amplitude parameter in terms of experimental data. WBC separation from a wedge-shaped continent past a cape (simulating Cape Hatteras) due to inertial overshooting is then analyzed. By increasing current speed, a critical behavior is identified according to which a very small change of up marks the transition from a WBC that follows the coast past the cape to a WBC (nearly dynamically similar to a full-scale Gulf Stream) that separates from the cape without any substantial deflection, as with the Gulf Stream Extension. The important effect of the deflection angle of the continent is analyzed as well. Finally, the qualitative effect of a sloping sidewall along a straight coast is considered: the deflection of the flow away from the western wall due to the tendency to preserve potential vorticity clearly emerges.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fumi Hayashi

<p>Western Boundary Currents (WBC), such as the Gulf Stream, leave a strong imprint on the ocean-atmosphere boundary in the form of strong gradients and high variability of Sea Surface Temperature (SST). Recent studies have shown that midlatitude oceanic fronts have an influence throughout the depth of the troposphere by means of synoptic systems such as weather fronts. An understanding of how the midlatitude ocean influences the synoptic system is crucial for better climate projection, however, this has been challenging. For example, in model simulations the sensitivity of the atmosphere to SST anomalies are dependent on its resolution, with low resolution models unable to capture the air-sea interactions occurring over warm sectors of midlatitude cyclones, possibly leading to underestimations of the oceanic influence on the atmosphere. A novel modelling technique is developed in which an interactive “mask” is used to systematically isolate and study the air-sea interaction over different synoptic regimes (warm and cold sector). Here, simulations using an idealised aqua-planet atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM) are used to study the atmospheric response to a tightening of SST gradient (comparable to that of the Gulf Stream) over the cold sector (“cold path”) and the warm sector (“warm path”) separately. Same experiments will also be performed on models with higher resolution to investigate the difference in atmospheric response between the high and low resolution models and what physical processes are responsible for such change in response.</p>


2017 ◽  
Vol 68 (10) ◽  
pp. 1887
Author(s):  
Yunyan Chen ◽  
Xiaoxia Sun ◽  
Mingliang Zhu ◽  
Shan Zheng ◽  
Yongquan Yuan ◽  
...  

The spatial distribution of phytoplankton was investigated during the summer of 2014 in two different regions of the Pacific western boundary current, namely the Warm Pool near the equator and the subtropical Kuroshio south area. Traditional approaches (size-fractionated chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) and microscopic analyses) combined with single-cell analysis (using a flow cytometer) were used to analyse the whole range of phytoplankton. Flow cytometry analysis resolved five clusters, two belonging to the pico-size fraction and three belonging to the nano-size fraction. Microscopy analysis revealed that the genera Coscinodiscus, Rhizosolenia, Chaetoceros and Ceratium were numerically dominant in the region studied. The lowest values of Chl-a, phytoplankton abundance and carbon biomass were found in the Kuroshio south area. Both Chl-a concentration data and flow cytometry analysis revealed that picophytoplankton were the predominant contributors to phytoplankton in the Pacific western boundary currents. Along the three transects during the summer cruise, Synechococcus and nanocyanobacteria-like organisms numerically dominated in surface waters with higher temperature. In contrast, eukaryotes were primarily distributed in subsurface waters with higher nutrients, especially in the eddy upwelling region mainly associated with the North Equatorial Counter Current. The vertical distribution of phytoplankton over the epipelagic layer reinforces the important role of currents in the north-western Pacific during summer.


2019 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 789-810 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaomei Yan ◽  
Dujuan Kang ◽  
Enrique N. Curchitser ◽  
Chongguang Pang

AbstractThe energetics of eddy–mean flow interactions along two western boundary currents of the North Pacific, the Kuroshio and Ryukyu Currents, are systematically investigated using 22 years of numerical data from the Ocean General Circulation Model for the Earth Simulator (OFES). For the time-mean and time-varying flow fields, all the energy components and conversions exhibit inhomogeneous spatial distributions. In the two currents, complex cross-stream and along-stream variations are seen in the eddy–mean flow energy conversions. East of Taiwan, the kinetic energy is mainly transferred from the mean flow to the eddy field through barotropic instability, whereas the baroclinic energy conversions form a meridional dipole structure caused by the topographic constraint. In the northern area, particularly, the eddy field drains 2.25 × 108 W of kinetic energy and releases 2.82 × 108 W of available potential energy when interacting with the mean flow, indicating that mesoscale eddies impinging on the Kuroshio decay with baroclinic inverse energy cascades. In the Ryukyu Current, inverse energy conversions from the eddy field to the mean flow also dominate the power transfer in the subsurface layer. The eddy field transfers 0.16 × 108 W of kinetic energy and 1.89 × 108 W of available potential energy to the mean flow, suggesting that meososcale eddies play an important role in maintaining the velocity and hydrographic structure of the current. In other areas, both barotropic and baroclinic instabilities contribute to the generation of eddy kinetic energy with the latter one providing more than 3 times as much power as the former one.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document