Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is a complex current system composed of multiple jets that is both unique to the world's oceans and relatively under observed compared with other current systems. Observations taken by current- and pressure-recording inverted echo sounders (CPIES) over fo...

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Main Author: Foppert, Annie
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: DigitalCommons@URI 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10605275
id ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:dissertations-3893
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
op_collection_id ftunivrhodeislan
language English
topic Physical oceanography
spellingShingle Physical oceanography
Foppert, Annie
Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage
topic_facet Physical oceanography
description The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is a complex current system composed of multiple jets that is both unique to the world's oceans and relatively under observed compared with other current systems. Observations taken by current- and pressure-recording inverted echo sounders (CPIES) over four years, from November 2007 to November 2011, quantify the mean structure of one of the main jets of the ACC - the Polar Front - in a composite-mean sense. While the array of CPIES deployed in Drake Passage included a 3 x 7 local dynamics array, analysis of the Polar Front makes use of the line of CPIES that spanned the width of Drake Passage (C-Line). The Polar Front tends to prefer one of two locations, separated along the C-Line by 1° of latitude, with the core of the jet centered on corresponding geopotential height contours (with a 17 cm dierence between the northern and southern jets). Potential vorticity fields suggest that the Polar Front is susceptible to baroclinic instability, regardless of whether it is found upstream (farther south along the C-Line) or downstream (farther north along the C-Line) of the Shackleton Fracture Zone (SFZ), yet the core of the jet remains a barrier to smaller-scale mixing, as inferred from estimated mixing lengths. Within the local dynamics array of CPIES, the observed offset between eddy heat flux (EHF) and eddy kinetic energy (EKE) and the alignment of EHF with sea surface height (SSH) standard deviation motivates a proxy for depth-integrated EHF that can be estimated from available satellite SSH data. An eddy-resolving numerical model develops the statistics of a logarithmic fit between SSH standard deviation and cross-frontal EHF that is applied to the ACC in a circumglobal sense. We find 1.06 PW enters the ACC from the north and 0.02 PW exits towards Antarctica. The magnitude of the estimated EHF, along with contemporaneous estimates of the mean heat flux, suggests that the air-sea heat flux south of the PF is an overestimate. Long-term trends in EHF are calculated from January 1992 to December 2014 and reveal varying trends at the eight ACC EHF hot spots, with only three having statistically significant temporal trends of strengthening cross-frontal EHF. The dynamics of an oceanic storm track are investigated using CPIES observations in the local dynamics array to better understand the processes responsible for the spatial oset between EHF and EKE. Wave activity flux ( W), calculated from the total geostrophic stream-function, is used to diagnose eddy-mean flow interactions in the eddy-rich region immediately downstream of the SFZ. In the full four-year mean and in a composite of eddy events, elevated values of eddy potential energy (EPE) are aligned with the vertical component of W. This is indicative of a conversion of mean available potential energy to EPE through EHF associated with baroclinic instability. Emanating from this region, horizontal W vectors point towards the adjacent region of elevated EKE. A case study of an eddy event, lasting from 15 to 23 July 2010, is presented and highlights the capability of W to illustrate the evolution of the storm track in a snap-shot sense. While baroclinic processes initially dominate the event, the alignment of elevated values of EKE with the convergence of the horizontal W vectors indicates the importance of barotropic processes in transporting EKE away from the ACC's interaction with the SFZ.
format Text
author Foppert, Annie
author_facet Foppert, Annie
author_sort Foppert, Annie
title Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage
title_short Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage
title_full Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage
title_fullStr Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage
title_full_unstemmed Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage
title_sort southern ocean eddy heat flux and eddy-mean flow interactions in drake passage
publisher DigitalCommons@URI
publishDate 2017
url https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10605275
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.000,-60.000,-60.000,-60.000)
geographic Antarctic
Drake Passage
Shackleton
Shackleton Fracture Zone
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Drake Passage
Shackleton
Shackleton Fracture Zone
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Drake Passage
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Drake Passage
Southern Ocean
op_source Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access)
op_relation https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10605275
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spelling ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:dissertations-3893 2023-05-15T14:03:08+02:00 Southern Ocean Eddy Heat Flux and Eddy-Mean Flow Interactions in Drake Passage Foppert, Annie 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10605275 ENG eng DigitalCommons@URI https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10605275 Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access) Physical oceanography text 2017 ftunivrhodeislan 2021-06-29T19:22:06Z The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is a complex current system composed of multiple jets that is both unique to the world's oceans and relatively under observed compared with other current systems. Observations taken by current- and pressure-recording inverted echo sounders (CPIES) over four years, from November 2007 to November 2011, quantify the mean structure of one of the main jets of the ACC - the Polar Front - in a composite-mean sense. While the array of CPIES deployed in Drake Passage included a 3 x 7 local dynamics array, analysis of the Polar Front makes use of the line of CPIES that spanned the width of Drake Passage (C-Line). The Polar Front tends to prefer one of two locations, separated along the C-Line by 1° of latitude, with the core of the jet centered on corresponding geopotential height contours (with a 17 cm dierence between the northern and southern jets). Potential vorticity fields suggest that the Polar Front is susceptible to baroclinic instability, regardless of whether it is found upstream (farther south along the C-Line) or downstream (farther north along the C-Line) of the Shackleton Fracture Zone (SFZ), yet the core of the jet remains a barrier to smaller-scale mixing, as inferred from estimated mixing lengths. Within the local dynamics array of CPIES, the observed offset between eddy heat flux (EHF) and eddy kinetic energy (EKE) and the alignment of EHF with sea surface height (SSH) standard deviation motivates a proxy for depth-integrated EHF that can be estimated from available satellite SSH data. An eddy-resolving numerical model develops the statistics of a logarithmic fit between SSH standard deviation and cross-frontal EHF that is applied to the ACC in a circumglobal sense. We find 1.06 PW enters the ACC from the north and 0.02 PW exits towards Antarctica. The magnitude of the estimated EHF, along with contemporaneous estimates of the mean heat flux, suggests that the air-sea heat flux south of the PF is an overestimate. Long-term trends in EHF are calculated from January 1992 to December 2014 and reveal varying trends at the eight ACC EHF hot spots, with only three having statistically significant temporal trends of strengthening cross-frontal EHF. The dynamics of an oceanic storm track are investigated using CPIES observations in the local dynamics array to better understand the processes responsible for the spatial oset between EHF and EKE. Wave activity flux ( W), calculated from the total geostrophic stream-function, is used to diagnose eddy-mean flow interactions in the eddy-rich region immediately downstream of the SFZ. In the full four-year mean and in a composite of eddy events, elevated values of eddy potential energy (EPE) are aligned with the vertical component of W. This is indicative of a conversion of mean available potential energy to EPE through EHF associated with baroclinic instability. Emanating from this region, horizontal W vectors point towards the adjacent region of elevated EKE. A case study of an eddy event, lasting from 15 to 23 July 2010, is presented and highlights the capability of W to illustrate the evolution of the storm track in a snap-shot sense. While baroclinic processes initially dominate the event, the alignment of elevated values of EKE with the convergence of the horizontal W vectors indicates the importance of barotropic processes in transporting EKE away from the ACC's interaction with the SFZ. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Drake Passage Southern Ocean University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI Antarctic Drake Passage Shackleton Shackleton Fracture Zone ENVELOPE(-60.000,-60.000,-60.000,-60.000) Southern Ocean The Antarctic