under a Creative Commons License. Ocean Science Comparing the steric height in the Northern Atlantic with satellite altimetry

Abstract. Anomalies of dynamic height derived from an analysis of Argo profiling buoys data are analysed to assess the relative roles of contributions from temperature and salin-ity over the North Atlantic for the period of 1999–2004. They are compared with dynamic topography anomalies based on TOPE...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: V. O. Ivchenko, S. D. Danilov, D. V. Sidorenko, M. Wenzel, D. L. Aleynik
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.657.5117
http://www.ocean-sci.net/3/485/2007/os-3-485-2007.pdf
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Summary:Abstract. Anomalies of dynamic height derived from an analysis of Argo profiling buoys data are analysed to assess the relative roles of contributions from temperature and salin-ity over the North Atlantic for the period of 1999–2004. They are compared with dynamic topography anomalies based on TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason altimetry. It is shown that the halosteric contribution to the anomalies of dynamic height is comparable in magnitude to the thermosteric one over the period analyzed. Taking both salinity and temperature into account improves the agreement between zonally aver-aged trends in the satellite dynamic topography and dynamic height increasing the correlation between them to 0.73 from 0.63 when only temperature variability is taken into account. The implication of this result is that the salinity contribution cannot be neglected in the North Atlantic and that one cannot rely on estimating the thermosteric part by anomalies in the sea surface dynamic topography derived from the satellite al-timetry. 1