Characteristics of Mesoscale and Submesoscale Eddies in the Labrador Sea: Observations vs. Model

Mesoscale eddies play an important role in lateral property fluxes. Observational studies often use sea level anomaly maps from satellite altimetry to estimate eddy statistics (incl. eddy kinetic energy). Recent findings suggest that altimetry derived eddy characteristics may suffer from the low spa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bendinger, Arne
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/55326/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/55326/1/Bendinger_1012126.pdf
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Summary:Mesoscale eddies play an important role in lateral property fluxes. Observational studies often use sea level anomaly maps from satellite altimetry to estimate eddy statistics (incl. eddy kinetic energy). Recent findings suggest that altimetry derived eddy characteristics may suffer from the low spatial resolution of past and current satellite-tracks in high-latitude oceans associated with small Rossby radii. This study presents results of an eddy reconstruction that provides an alternative perspective on the eddy field based on a nonlinear, damping Gauss-Newton optimisation algorithm using ship-based current profiler observations from two research expeditions in the Labrador Sea in 2014 and 2018. The derived eddy characteristics are compared to the high-resolution submesoscale permitting NATL60 model (1/60°). Overall, a total of 14 eddies with radii ranging from 7 to 35km and azimuthal velocities ranging from 20 to 60 cm s−1 were detected, of which 3 eddies were identified as Irminger rings. Irminger rings are characterised by a warm, salty lens either surface trapped or overlaid by a cold, fresh cap of water. The modelled eddies are on average 25% smaller in radius and 20% higher in azimuthal velocity accompanied by increased nonlinearity. The inner ring velocity structure for observations and NATL60 suggests solid-body rotation for 1/2 to 2/3 of the radius. The eddy boundary and outer ring velocity structure follows a more Gaussian-like shape, best described by a exp(−r2) dependency. Furthermore, the maximum azimuthal velocity may deviate from solid-body rotation by more than 30% for the observations and 50% for the model. In order to verify the skill of eddy reconstruction, the NATL60 served as a reference data set for the skill assessment of the Gauss-Newton method. It is shown that the eddy characteristics are affected by the location of the ship track through the velocity field. In most cases, however, the derived properties are not expected to deviate by more than 10%. Spectral analysis of the horizontal ...