Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio

The large-scale ocean circulation is driven both by windstress forcing and by fluxes of heat and freshwater at the ocean-atmosphere surface. At midlatitudes, the most prominent features of the mainly wind-driven surface circulation are the large coherent circulation patterns (gyres) (chapter 1: Fig....

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Main Author: Schmeits, M.J.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/662
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spelling ftunivutrecht:oai:dspace.library.uu.nl:1874/662 2023-07-23T04:20:31+02:00 Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio Schmeits, M.J. 2001-05-14 application/pdf https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/662 en eng https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/662 info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess Natuur- en Sterrenkunde Physical oceanography wind-driven ocean circulation data analysis dynamical systems analysis variability bimodality Gulf Stream Kuroshio North Atlantic North Pacific Dissertation 2001 ftunivutrecht 2023-07-01T22:45:49Z The large-scale ocean circulation is driven both by windstress forcing and by fluxes of heat and freshwater at the ocean-atmosphere surface. At midlatitudes, the most prominent features of the mainly wind-driven surface circulation are the large coherent circulation patterns (gyres) (chapter 1: Fig. 1.1). In the North Atlantic and North Pacific a relatively strong anticyclonic (subtropical) gyre is seen and a relatively weak cyclonic (subpolar) gyre. Along the western boundaries of the ocean basins strong currents exist. These currents are referred to as western boundary currents and the poleward-flowing currents carry warm water from the tropics to midlatitudes. Hence, they play an important role in the climate system. The major western boundary currents in the North Atlantic and North Pacific are called the Gulf Stream and Kuroshio, respectively. For a long time, observations have been pointing out that the Kuroshio displays bimodal meandering behavior off the southern coast of Japan (chapter 1: Fig. 1.4). For the Gulf Stream, weakly and strongly deflected paths near the coast of South Carolina have been observed (chapter 1: Fig. 1.3). This suggests that bimodal behavior may occur in the Gulf Stream as well, although less pronounced than in the Kuroshio. Apart from this bimodality, both currents show dominant variability on intermonthly timescales. Within a hierarchy of equivalent barotropic models on a ß-plane (chapter 1), it is found that multiple mean flows are dynamically possible for the North Atlantic wind-driven circulation. Besides, the modes of intermonthly variability arising as instabilities on the mean states are closely linked within this hierarchy of models. Therefore, the two main questions addressed in this thesis (chapters 3-5) are: Can the observed (possible) bimodal behavior of the Kuroshio (Gulf Stream) be explained by transitions between multiple steady states? Can the observed variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio on intermonthly timescales be explained by instabilities of the ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis North Atlantic Utrecht University Repository Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Utrecht University Repository
op_collection_id ftunivutrecht
language English
topic Natuur- en Sterrenkunde
Physical oceanography
wind-driven ocean circulation
data analysis
dynamical systems analysis
variability
bimodality
Gulf Stream
Kuroshio
North Atlantic
North Pacific
spellingShingle Natuur- en Sterrenkunde
Physical oceanography
wind-driven ocean circulation
data analysis
dynamical systems analysis
variability
bimodality
Gulf Stream
Kuroshio
North Atlantic
North Pacific
Schmeits, M.J.
Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio
topic_facet Natuur- en Sterrenkunde
Physical oceanography
wind-driven ocean circulation
data analysis
dynamical systems analysis
variability
bimodality
Gulf Stream
Kuroshio
North Atlantic
North Pacific
description The large-scale ocean circulation is driven both by windstress forcing and by fluxes of heat and freshwater at the ocean-atmosphere surface. At midlatitudes, the most prominent features of the mainly wind-driven surface circulation are the large coherent circulation patterns (gyres) (chapter 1: Fig. 1.1). In the North Atlantic and North Pacific a relatively strong anticyclonic (subtropical) gyre is seen and a relatively weak cyclonic (subpolar) gyre. Along the western boundaries of the ocean basins strong currents exist. These currents are referred to as western boundary currents and the poleward-flowing currents carry warm water from the tropics to midlatitudes. Hence, they play an important role in the climate system. The major western boundary currents in the North Atlantic and North Pacific are called the Gulf Stream and Kuroshio, respectively. For a long time, observations have been pointing out that the Kuroshio displays bimodal meandering behavior off the southern coast of Japan (chapter 1: Fig. 1.4). For the Gulf Stream, weakly and strongly deflected paths near the coast of South Carolina have been observed (chapter 1: Fig. 1.3). This suggests that bimodal behavior may occur in the Gulf Stream as well, although less pronounced than in the Kuroshio. Apart from this bimodality, both currents show dominant variability on intermonthly timescales. Within a hierarchy of equivalent barotropic models on a ß-plane (chapter 1), it is found that multiple mean flows are dynamically possible for the North Atlantic wind-driven circulation. Besides, the modes of intermonthly variability arising as instabilities on the mean states are closely linked within this hierarchy of models. Therefore, the two main questions addressed in this thesis (chapters 3-5) are: Can the observed (possible) bimodal behavior of the Kuroshio (Gulf Stream) be explained by transitions between multiple steady states? Can the observed variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio on intermonthly timescales be explained by instabilities of the ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Schmeits, M.J.
author_facet Schmeits, M.J.
author_sort Schmeits, M.J.
title Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio
title_short Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio
title_full Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio
title_fullStr Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio
title_full_unstemmed Bimodality and internal variability of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio
title_sort bimodality and internal variability of the gulf stream and the kuroshio
publishDate 2001
url https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/662
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/662
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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