Depth dependence of westward-propagating North Atlantic features diagnosed from altimetry and a numerical 1/6 degree model
Depth dependence of westward-propagating North Atlantic features diagnosed from altimetry and a numerical 1/6 degree model
A 1/6° numerical simulation is used to investigate the vertical structure of westward propagation between 1993 and 2000 in the North Atlantic ocean. The realism of the simulated westward propagating signals, interpreted principally as the signature of first-mode baroclinic Rossby waves (RW), is first assessed by comparing the simulated amplitude and zonal phase speeds of Sea Level Anomalies (SLA) against TOPEX/Poseidon-ERS satellite altimeter data. Then, the (unobserved) subsurface signature of RW phase speeds is investigated from model outputs by means of the Radon Transform which was specifically adapted to focus on first-mode baroclinic RW. The analysis is performed on observed and simulated SLA and along 9 simulated isopycnal displacements spanning the 0–3250 m depth range. Simulated RW phase speeds agree well with their observed counterparts at the surface, although with a slight slow bias. Below the surface, the simulated phase speeds exhibit a systematic deceleration with increasing depth, by a factor that appears to vary geographically. Thus, while the reduction factor is about 15–18% on average at 3250 m over the region considered, it appears to be much weaker (about 5–8%) in the eddy-active Azores Current, where westward propagating structures might be more coherent in the vertical. In the context of linear theories, these results question the often-made normal mode assumption of many WKB-based theories that the phase speed is independent of depth. Alternatively, these results could also suggest that the vertical structure of westward propagating signals may significantly depend on their degree of nonlinearity, with the degree of vertical coherence possibly increasing with the degree of nonlinearity.
99-113
Lecointre, A.
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Penduff, T.
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Cipollini, P.
276e356a-f29e-4192-98b3-9340b491dab8
Tailleux, R.
f29f3572-63b7-477f-8ecc-20752027a86e
Barnier, B.
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18 March 2008
Lecointre, A.
4f1e1a4f-d8a0-4578-989f-40e0a85fa26f
Penduff, T.
acc9246c-9cec-4909-814f-ec3eefa7f11d
Cipollini, P.
276e356a-f29e-4192-98b3-9340b491dab8
Tailleux, R.
f29f3572-63b7-477f-8ecc-20752027a86e
Barnier, B.
0179fa7c-ed1b-45df-9e81-5a959268d99b
Lecointre, A., Penduff, T., Cipollini, P., Tailleux, R. and Barnier, B.
(2008)
Depth dependence of westward-propagating North Atlantic features diagnosed from altimetry and a numerical 1/6 degree model.
Ocean Science, 4 (1), .
(doi:10.5194/os-4-99-2008).
Abstract
A 1/6° numerical simulation is used to investigate the vertical structure of westward propagation between 1993 and 2000 in the North Atlantic ocean. The realism of the simulated westward propagating signals, interpreted principally as the signature of first-mode baroclinic Rossby waves (RW), is first assessed by comparing the simulated amplitude and zonal phase speeds of Sea Level Anomalies (SLA) against TOPEX/Poseidon-ERS satellite altimeter data. Then, the (unobserved) subsurface signature of RW phase speeds is investigated from model outputs by means of the Radon Transform which was specifically adapted to focus on first-mode baroclinic RW. The analysis is performed on observed and simulated SLA and along 9 simulated isopycnal displacements spanning the 0–3250 m depth range. Simulated RW phase speeds agree well with their observed counterparts at the surface, although with a slight slow bias. Below the surface, the simulated phase speeds exhibit a systematic deceleration with increasing depth, by a factor that appears to vary geographically. Thus, while the reduction factor is about 15–18% on average at 3250 m over the region considered, it appears to be much weaker (about 5–8%) in the eddy-active Azores Current, where westward propagating structures might be more coherent in the vertical. In the context of linear theories, these results question the often-made normal mode assumption of many WKB-based theories that the phase speed is independent of depth. Alternatively, these results could also suggest that the vertical structure of westward propagating signals may significantly depend on their degree of nonlinearity, with the degree of vertical coherence possibly increasing with the degree of nonlinearity.
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os-4-99-2008
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Published date: 18 March 2008
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Local EPrints ID: 50920
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/50920
ISSN: 1812-0792
PURE UUID: 531b3073-98ff-4098-9637-d5ed7172ca2f
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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:13
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Author:
A. Lecointre
Author:
T. Penduff
Author:
P. Cipollini
Author:
R. Tailleux
Author:
B. Barnier
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