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Global statistics of inertial motions

Global statistics of inertial motions
Global statistics of inertial motions
Statistics of inertial currents in the North Pacific, North Atlantic, and Southern Ocean are derived for the period 1997–2003 from surface trajectories of Argo profiling floats by employing a method developed recently by Park et al. (2004). The distribution of inertial amplitudes is non-Gaussian in the range 0~80 cm/sec with an average value of 13.7 cm/sec. The inertial amplitude in the mid-latitude (30°~45°N) band exceeds those in both the low (15°~30°N) and high (45°~60°N) latitude bands. In three basins, the amplitude in summer is greater than that in winter by 15%~25%. The inertial energy in the mixed layer reaches approximately 1100 J/m2~1165 J/m2 globally. The spatiotemporal patterns of inertial amplitudes in the North Atlantic mostly depend on the MLD, which exhibits strong meridional gradients. However, the small meridional gradient of the MLD in the North Pacific does not contribute significantly to the spatial distribution of inertial amplitudes. The total inertial energy estimated from the floats is consistent with the theory that inertial energy could contribute significantly to sustaining the meridional overturning circulation.
0094-8276
L14612
Park, J.J.
28bc393d-8ba6-4f68-9562-fba4969b5d4f
Kim, K.
b7199e71-15d6-4159-ac0a-c7f1261a5439
King, B.A.
d9d50671-3777-453b-9f85-c67a56a4d8b8
Park, J.J.
28bc393d-8ba6-4f68-9562-fba4969b5d4f
Kim, K.
b7199e71-15d6-4159-ac0a-c7f1261a5439
King, B.A.
d9d50671-3777-453b-9f85-c67a56a4d8b8

Park, J.J., Kim, K. and King, B.A. (2005) Global statistics of inertial motions. Geophysical Research Letters, 32 (14), L14612. (doi:10.1029/2005GL023258).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Statistics of inertial currents in the North Pacific, North Atlantic, and Southern Ocean are derived for the period 1997–2003 from surface trajectories of Argo profiling floats by employing a method developed recently by Park et al. (2004). The distribution of inertial amplitudes is non-Gaussian in the range 0~80 cm/sec with an average value of 13.7 cm/sec. The inertial amplitude in the mid-latitude (30°~45°N) band exceeds those in both the low (15°~30°N) and high (45°~60°N) latitude bands. In three basins, the amplitude in summer is greater than that in winter by 15%~25%. The inertial energy in the mixed layer reaches approximately 1100 J/m2~1165 J/m2 globally. The spatiotemporal patterns of inertial amplitudes in the North Atlantic mostly depend on the MLD, which exhibits strong meridional gradients. However, the small meridional gradient of the MLD in the North Pacific does not contribute significantly to the spatial distribution of inertial amplitudes. The total inertial energy estimated from the floats is consistent with the theory that inertial energy could contribute significantly to sustaining the meridional overturning circulation.

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Published date: 2005
Organisations: National Oceanography Centre,Southampton

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 17440
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/17440
ISSN: 0094-8276
PURE UUID: cd4fdde7-1c5f-4aa1-96f2-3f76a334387c

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Date deposited: 19 Sep 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:59

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Contributors

Author: J.J. Park
Author: K. Kim
Author: B.A. King

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