Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s

Mesoscale eddies play an important role in both momentum and heat balances in the Southern Ocean. Previous studies have documented an increasing intensity of the Southern Ocean eddy field during recent decades; however, it is still unclear whether the mesoscale eddies with different lifetimes have d...

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Main Authors: Shi, Fei, Luo, Yiyong, Wu, Renhao, Yang, Qinghua, Chen, Ruiyi, Wang, Chuanyin, Lin, Yichen, Chen, Dake, Wang, Guihua, Cheng, Xuhua, He, Yinghui, Martínez-Moreno, Josué, Hogg, Andrew
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Authorea, Inc. 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167048300.05862577/v1
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spelling crwinnower:10.22541/essoar.167048300.05862577/v1 2024-06-02T08:14:42+00:00 Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s Shi, Fei Luo, Yiyong Wu, Renhao Yang, Qinghua Chen, Ruiyi Wang, Chuanyin Lin, Yichen Chen, Dake Wang, Guihua Cheng, Xuhua He, Yinghui Martínez-Moreno, Josué Hogg, Andrew 2022 http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167048300.05862577/v1 unknown Authorea, Inc. posted-content 2022 crwinnower https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167048300.05862577/v1 2024-05-07T14:19:11Z Mesoscale eddies play an important role in both momentum and heat balances in the Southern Ocean. Previous studies have documented an increasing intensity of the Southern Ocean eddy field during recent decades; however, it is still unclear whether the mesoscale eddies with different lifetimes have different temporal variations. Using satellite altimeter observations from 1993 to 2020, we find that the increasing trend in the intensity of eddies is dominated by long-lived eddies (with lifetimes ≥ 90 days), whose amplitude has increased at a rate of ~2.8% per decade; the increase is concentrated downstream of topography. In contrast, short-lived eddies (with lifetimes < 90 days) do not appear to have a significant trend in their amplitudes since the early 1990s. An energy conversion analysis indicates that the increased baroclinic instabilities of the mean flows associated with topography are responsible for the amplitude increase of the long-lived eddies. Other/Unknown Material Southern Ocean The Winnower Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection The Winnower
op_collection_id crwinnower
language unknown
description Mesoscale eddies play an important role in both momentum and heat balances in the Southern Ocean. Previous studies have documented an increasing intensity of the Southern Ocean eddy field during recent decades; however, it is still unclear whether the mesoscale eddies with different lifetimes have different temporal variations. Using satellite altimeter observations from 1993 to 2020, we find that the increasing trend in the intensity of eddies is dominated by long-lived eddies (with lifetimes ≥ 90 days), whose amplitude has increased at a rate of ~2.8% per decade; the increase is concentrated downstream of topography. In contrast, short-lived eddies (with lifetimes < 90 days) do not appear to have a significant trend in their amplitudes since the early 1990s. An energy conversion analysis indicates that the increased baroclinic instabilities of the mean flows associated with topography are responsible for the amplitude increase of the long-lived eddies.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Shi, Fei
Luo, Yiyong
Wu, Renhao
Yang, Qinghua
Chen, Ruiyi
Wang, Chuanyin
Lin, Yichen
Chen, Dake
Wang, Guihua
Cheng, Xuhua
He, Yinghui
Martínez-Moreno, Josué
Hogg, Andrew
spellingShingle Shi, Fei
Luo, Yiyong
Wu, Renhao
Yang, Qinghua
Chen, Ruiyi
Wang, Chuanyin
Lin, Yichen
Chen, Dake
Wang, Guihua
Cheng, Xuhua
He, Yinghui
Martínez-Moreno, Josué
Hogg, Andrew
Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s
author_facet Shi, Fei
Luo, Yiyong
Wu, Renhao
Yang, Qinghua
Chen, Ruiyi
Wang, Chuanyin
Lin, Yichen
Chen, Dake
Wang, Guihua
Cheng, Xuhua
He, Yinghui
Martínez-Moreno, Josué
Hogg, Andrew
author_sort Shi, Fei
title Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s
title_short Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s
title_full Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s
title_fullStr Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s
title_full_unstemmed Contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean since the 1990s
title_sort contrasting trends in short-lived and long-lived mesoscale eddies in the southern ocean since the 1990s
publisher Authorea, Inc.
publishDate 2022
url http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167048300.05862577/v1
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_doi https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167048300.05862577/v1
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