geostrophic velocities
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luna Hiron ◽  
David Nolan ◽  
Lynn Shay

<p>Mesoscale eddies drive a large fraction of the variability in the ocean. Eddies with strong tangential velocity compared to their translation speed are able to stay coherent and travel long distances, carrying water mass properties, heat, nutrients, and particles around the ocean. The nonlinearity of these mesoscale features is greater for stronger flow and greater curvature, which, consequently, is associated with greater centrifugal force.</p><p>The Gulf of Mexico Loop Current (LC) system has long been assumed to be close to geostrophic balance despite its strong flow and the development of large meanders and strong frontal eddies during unstable phases. The region between the LC meanders and its frontal eddies was shown to have high Rossby numbers indicating nonlinearity; however, the effect of the nonlinear term on the flow has not been studied so far. In this study, the ageostrophy of the LC meanders is assessed using a high-resolution numerical model and geostrophic velocities from altimetry. The method used in this study can be applied in any region where the centrifugal force is important. A formula to compute the radius of curvature of the flow from the velocity field is also presented.</p><p>The results indicate that during strong meandering, especially before and during LC shedding and in the presence of frontal eddies, the centrifugal force becomes as important as the Coriolis force and the pressure-gradient force: LC meanders are in gradient-wind balance. The centrifugal force modulates the balance and modifies the flow speed, resulting in a subgeostrophic flow in the LC meander trough around the frontal eddies and supergeostrophic flow in the LC meander crest. The same pattern is found when correcting the geostrophic velocities from altimetry to account for the centrifugal force. The ageostrophic percentage in the cyclonic and anticyclonic meanders is 47% ± 1% and 78% ± 8% in the model and 31% ± 3% and 78% ± 29% in the altimetry dataset, respectively. Thus, the ageostrophic velocity is an important component of the LC flow and cannot be neglected when studying the LC system.</p><p> </p><p> </p><p> </p>


Author(s):  
Luna Hiron ◽  
David S. Nolan ◽  
Lynn K. Shay

AbstractThe Loop Current (LC) system has long been assumed to be close to geostrophic balance despite its strong flow and the development of large meanders and strong frontal eddies during unstable phases. The region between the LC meanders and its frontal eddies was shown to have high Rossby numbers indicating nonlinearity; however, the effect of the nonlinear term on the flow has not been studied so far. In this study, the ageostrophy of the LC meanders is assessed using a high-resolution numerical model and geostrophic velocities from altimetry. A formula to compute the radius of curvature of the flow from the velocity field is also presented. The results indicate that during strong meandering, especially before and during LC shedding and in the presence of frontal eddies, the centrifugal force becomes as important as the Coriolis force and the pressure-gradient force: LC meanders are in gradient-wind balance. The centrifugal force modulates the balance and modifies the flow speed, resulting in a subgeostrophic flow in the LC meander trough around the LCFE and supergeostrophic flow in the LC meander crest. The same pattern is found when correcting the geostrophic velocities from altimetry to account for the centrifugal force. The ageostrophic percentage in the cyclonic and anticyclonic meanders is 47% ± 1% and 78% ± 8% in the model and 31% ± 3% and 78% ± 29% in the altimetry dataset, respectively. Thus, the ageostrophic velocity is an important component of the LC flow and cannot be neglected when studying the LC system.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (9) ◽  
pp. 2735-2758
Author(s):  
Tiago Carrilho Biló ◽  
William E. Johns

AbstractThe mean North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW, 1000 < z < 5000 m) circulation and deep western boundary current (DWBC) variability offshore of Abaco, Bahamas, at 26.5°N are investigated from nearly two decades of velocity and hydrographic observations, and outputs from a 30-yr-long eddy-resolving global simulation. Observations at 26.5°N and Argo-derived geostrophic velocities show the presence of a mean Abaco Gyre spanning the NADW layer, consisting of a closed cyclonic circulation between approximately 24° and 30°N and 72° and 77°W. The southward-flowing portion of this gyre (the DWBC) is constrained to within ~150 km of the western boundary with a mean transport of ~30 Sv (1 Sv ≡ 106 m3 s−1). Offshore of the DWBC, the data show a consistent northward recirculation with net transports varying from 6.5 to 16 Sv. Current meter records spanning 2008–17 supported by the numerical simulation indicate that the DWBC transport variability is dominated by two distinct types of fluctuations: 1) periods of 250–280 days that occur regularly throughout the time series and 2) energetic oscillations with periods between 400 and 700 days that occur sporadically every 5–6 years and force the DWBC to meander far offshore for several months. The shorter-period variations are related to DWBC meandering caused by eddies propagating southward along the continental slope at 24°–30°N, while the longer-period oscillations appear to be related to large anticyclonic eddies that slowly propagate northwestward counter to the DWBC flow between ~20° and 26.5°N. Observational and theoretical evidence suggest that these two types of variability might be generated, respectively, by DWBC instability processes and Rossby waves reflecting from the western boundary.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 106-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey A. Lebedev ◽  
Andrey G. Kostianoy

The paper presents the results of estimation of interannual and seasonal variability of water exchange between the Northern, Middle and Southern Caspian Sea based on the TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason–1/2/3 satellite altimetry data. The boundaries between the Caspian Sea sub-basins were taken along the 133 and 209 tracks of the satellites. Temporal variability of surface geostrophic velocities directed perpendicular to the tracks showed that positive values correspond to the southeast direction of the currents, negative values correspond to the northwest direction. It is clearly seen that the main water exchange associated with the Volga River runoff is concentrated along the western coast of the Caspian Sea. In this area, anomalies of geostrophic velocities exceed 20 cm/s. Total water exchange anomalies through the 133 and 209 tracks show seasonal variability with an amplitude up to ±18x105 m3/s for track 133 (a line between the Northern and Middle Caspian) and ±11x105 m3/s for track 209 (a line between the Middle and Southern Caspian). The maximum values of water exchange anomalies were observed in 1993, 1994 and 2012 through 133 track (±16-18x105 m3/s) and in 1993, 1996 and 1997 (±11x105 m3/s) through 209 track.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 667-685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan Abernathey ◽  
George Haller

AbstractRotationally coherent Lagrangian vortices (RCLVs) are identified from satellite-derived surface geostrophic velocities in the eastern Pacific (180°–130°W) using the objective (frame invariant) finite-time Lagrangian coherent structure detection method of Haller et al. based on the Lagrangian-averaged vorticity deviation. RCLVs are identified for 30-, 90-, and 270-day intervals over the entire satellite dataset, beginning in 1993. In contrast to structures identified using Eulerian eddy-tracking methods, the RCLVs maintain material coherence over the specified time intervals, making them suitable for material transport estimates. Statistics of RCLVs are compared to statistics of eddies identified from sea surface height (SSH) by Chelton et al. RCLVs and SSH eddies are found to propagate westward at similar speeds at each latitude, consistent with the Rossby wave dispersion relation. However, RCLVs are uniformly smaller and shorter-lived than SSH eddies. A coherent eddy diffusivity is derived to quantify the contribution of RCLVs to meridional transport; it is found that RCLVs contribute less than 1% to net meridional dispersion and diffusion in this sector, implying that eddy transport of tracers is mostly due to incoherent motions, such as swirling and filamentation outside of the eddy cores, rather than coherent meridional translation of eddies themselves. These findings call into question prior estimates of coherent eddy transport based on Eulerian eddy identification methods.


2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 2305-2324 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Cravatte ◽  
Elodie Kestenare ◽  
Frédéric Marin ◽  
Pierre Dutrieux ◽  
Eric Firing

AbstractThe mean subthermocline and intermediate zonal circulation in the tropical Pacific is investigated using a compilation of shipboard ADCP measurements and absolute geostrophic velocities constructed from a high-resolution 0–2000-m Argo climatology referenced to a 1000-m velocity field derived from Argo float drifts. This reference field is dominated by basinwide alternating zonal jets with a meridional wavelength of about 3°. In regions where the sampling of SADCP data is sufficient, the consistency between the two independent datasets is striking; using the Argo drift reference is crucial to capture the current structures. Two apparently distinct systems of alternating westward and eastward zonal jets are seen in both datasets equatorward of 10°: a series of low-latitude subthermocline currents (LLSCs) below the thermocline, extending from about 200 to 800 m, including the eastward Tsuchiya jets; and a series of low-latitude intermediate currents (LLICs), extending from about 700 to at least 2000 m. These systems seem to merge poleward of 10°. Both series shoal to lighter densities eastward. The subthermocline currents and their associated potential vorticity structures undergo a major shift near 155°W, suggesting some difference in the dynamic regime between the regions west and east of this longitude. Differing behaviors (the LLSCs tend to angle poleward to the east, whereas the LLICs angle slightly equatorward) suggest that these jets may be dynamically distinct, with different forcing mechanisms.


Author(s):  
A. B. Polonsky ◽  
◽  
A.N. Screbrennikov ◽  

The effect of long-period variability of the speed and direction of sea surface winds, absolute geostrophic velocities on the sea surface temperature (SST) and thermal upwelling index (TUI) trends in the Canary upwelling region is considered using satellite data from 1980 to 2016. Despite the statistically significant intensification of the surface wind in the region, there were no long-term trends in the upwelling intensity (expressed in SST terms), as well as in the geostrophic velocities. It is concluded that the absence of a significant intensification of the Canary upwelling with the increase of the drift wind in the region is associated with a general weakening of the northeast trade wind due to the observed global warming.


2015 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-92
Author(s):  
Yu-Chia Chang ◽  
Ruo-Shan Tseng ◽  
Peter C Chu ◽  
Huan-Jie Shao

This study provides a global, detailed, and complete energy-saving map of strong ocean currents from the absolute geostrophic velocities calculated from satellite altimetry data, with the focus on the strong Western Boundary Currents (WBCs) in the global ocean. Theoretically, the WBCs with speeds of 2–3 knots can reduce fuel consumption by 25–50% for vessels at a sailing speed of 6 knots. The fuel savings are greater for a lower sailing speed than for a higher sailing speed. For about 1·8 million motorised fishing vessels with a lower ship speed, strong currents can evidently save fuel, time and money. Since global fishing vessels generate roughly 130 million tonnes of CO2 per annum (FAO, 2012), effective utilisation of the energy-saving map could significantly reduce CO2 emissions from ship operations.


2015 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 1449-1450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison R. Gray ◽  
Stephen C. Riser

AbstractThis response addresses the three comments by A. Polonsky on “A Global Analysis of Sverdrup Balance Using Absolute Geostrophic Velocities from Argo.”


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