The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures

Tests of the new Rossby wave theories that have been developed over the past decade to account for discrepancies between theoretical wave speeds and those observed by satellite altimeters have focused primarily on the surface signature of such waves. It appears, however, that the surface signature o...

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Published in:Ocean Science
Main Authors: Hunt, F. K., Tailleux, R., Hirschi, J. J.-M.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/os-8-19-2012
https://os.copernicus.org/articles/8/19/2012/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:os11294 2023-05-15T17:37:19+02:00 The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures Hunt, F. K. Tailleux, R. Hirschi, J. J.-M. 2018-01-15 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/os-8-19-2012 https://os.copernicus.org/articles/8/19/2012/ eng eng doi:10.5194/os-8-19-2012 https://os.copernicus.org/articles/8/19/2012/ eISSN: 1812-0792 Text 2018 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/os-8-19-2012 2020-07-20T16:25:55Z Tests of the new Rossby wave theories that have been developed over the past decade to account for discrepancies between theoretical wave speeds and those observed by satellite altimeters have focused primarily on the surface signature of such waves. It appears, however, that the surface signature of the waves acts only as a rather weak constraint, and that information on the vertical structure of the waves is required to better discriminate between competing theories. Due to the lack of 3-D observations, this paper uses high-resolution model data to construct realistic vertical structures of Rossby waves and compares these to structures predicted by theory. The meridional velocity of a section at 24° S in the Atlantic Ocean is pre-processed using the Radon transform to select the dominant westward signal. Normalized profiles are then constructed using three complementary methods based respectively on: (1) averaging vertical profiles of velocity, (2) diagnosing the amplitude of the Radon transform of the westward propagating signal at different depths, and (3) EOF analysis. These profiles are compared to profiles calculated using four different Rossby wave theories: standard linear theory (SLT), SLT plus mean flow, SLT plus topographic effects, and theory including mean flow and topographic effects. Our results support the classical theoretical assumption that westward propagating signals have a well-defined vertical modal structure associated with a phase speed independent of depth, in contrast with the conclusions of a recent study using the same model but for different locations in the North Atlantic. The model structures are in general surface intensified, with a sign reversal at depth in some regions, notably occurring at shallower depths in the East Atlantic. SLT provides a good fit to the model structures in the top 300 m, but grossly overestimates the sign reversal at depth. The addition of mean flow slightly improves the latter issue, but is too surface intensified. SLT plus topography rectifies the overestimation of the sign reversal, but overestimates the amplitude of the structure for much of the layer above the sign reversal. Combining the effects of mean flow and topography provided the best fit for the mean model profiles, although small errors at the surface and mid-depths are carried over from the individual effects of mean flow and topography respectively. Across the section the best fitting theory varies between SLT plus topography and topography with mean flow, with, in general, SLT plus topography performing better in the east where the sign reversal is less pronounced. None of the theories could accurately reproduce the deeper sign reversals in the west. All theories performed badly at the boundaries. The generalization of this method to other latitudes, oceans, models and baroclinic modes would provide greater insight into the variability in the ocean, while better observational data would allow verification of the model findings. Text North Atlantic Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Ocean Science 8 1 19 35
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collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
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language English
description Tests of the new Rossby wave theories that have been developed over the past decade to account for discrepancies between theoretical wave speeds and those observed by satellite altimeters have focused primarily on the surface signature of such waves. It appears, however, that the surface signature of the waves acts only as a rather weak constraint, and that information on the vertical structure of the waves is required to better discriminate between competing theories. Due to the lack of 3-D observations, this paper uses high-resolution model data to construct realistic vertical structures of Rossby waves and compares these to structures predicted by theory. The meridional velocity of a section at 24° S in the Atlantic Ocean is pre-processed using the Radon transform to select the dominant westward signal. Normalized profiles are then constructed using three complementary methods based respectively on: (1) averaging vertical profiles of velocity, (2) diagnosing the amplitude of the Radon transform of the westward propagating signal at different depths, and (3) EOF analysis. These profiles are compared to profiles calculated using four different Rossby wave theories: standard linear theory (SLT), SLT plus mean flow, SLT plus topographic effects, and theory including mean flow and topographic effects. Our results support the classical theoretical assumption that westward propagating signals have a well-defined vertical modal structure associated with a phase speed independent of depth, in contrast with the conclusions of a recent study using the same model but for different locations in the North Atlantic. The model structures are in general surface intensified, with a sign reversal at depth in some regions, notably occurring at shallower depths in the East Atlantic. SLT provides a good fit to the model structures in the top 300 m, but grossly overestimates the sign reversal at depth. The addition of mean flow slightly improves the latter issue, but is too surface intensified. SLT plus topography rectifies the overestimation of the sign reversal, but overestimates the amplitude of the structure for much of the layer above the sign reversal. Combining the effects of mean flow and topography provided the best fit for the mean model profiles, although small errors at the surface and mid-depths are carried over from the individual effects of mean flow and topography respectively. Across the section the best fitting theory varies between SLT plus topography and topography with mean flow, with, in general, SLT plus topography performing better in the east where the sign reversal is less pronounced. None of the theories could accurately reproduce the deeper sign reversals in the west. All theories performed badly at the boundaries. The generalization of this method to other latitudes, oceans, models and baroclinic modes would provide greater insight into the variability in the ocean, while better observational data would allow verification of the model findings.
format Text
author Hunt, F. K.
Tailleux, R.
Hirschi, J. J.-M.
spellingShingle Hunt, F. K.
Tailleux, R.
Hirschi, J. J.-M.
The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures
author_facet Hunt, F. K.
Tailleux, R.
Hirschi, J. J.-M.
author_sort Hunt, F. K.
title The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures
title_short The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures
title_full The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures
title_fullStr The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures
title_full_unstemmed The vertical structure of oceanic Rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures
title_sort vertical structure of oceanic rossby waves: a comparison of high-resolution model data to theoretical vertical structures
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/os-8-19-2012
https://os.copernicus.org/articles/8/19/2012/
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