Variability of shallow and deep western boundary currents off the Bahamas during 2004–05: results from the 26°N RAPID–MOC Array
Variability of shallow and deep western boundary currents off the Bahamas during 2004–05: results from the 26°N RAPID–MOC Array
Data from an array of six moorings deployed east of Abaco, Bahamas, along 26.5°N during March 2004–May 2005 are analyzed. These moorings formed the western boundary array of a transbasin observing system designed to continuously monitor the meridional overturning circulation and meridional heat flux in the subtropical North Atlantic, under the framework of the joint U.K.–U.S. Rapid Climate Change (RAPID)–Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) Program. Important features of the western boundary circulation include the southward-flowing deep western boundary current (DWBC) below 1000 m and the northward-flowing “Antilles” Current in the upper 1000 m. Transports in the western boundary layer are estimated from direct current meter observations and from dynamic height moorings that measure the spatially integrated geostrophic flow between moorings. The results of these methods are combined to estimate the time-varying transports in the upper and deep ocean over the width of the western boundary layer to a distance of 500 km offshore of the Bahamas escarpment. The net southward transport of the DWBC across this region, inclusive of northward deep recirculation, is ?26.5 Sv (Sv 106 m3 s?1), which is divided nearly equally between upper (?13.9 Sv) and lower (?12.6 Sv) North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW). In the top 1000 m, 6.0 Sv flows northward in a thermocline-intensified jet near the western boundary. These transports are found to agree well with historical current meter data in the region collected between 1986 and 1997. Variability in both shallow and deep components of the circulation is large, with transports above 1000 m varying between ?15 and +25 Sv and deep transports varying between ?60 and +3 Sv. Much of this transport variability, associated with barotropic fluctuations, occurs on relatively short time scales of several days to a few weeks. Upon removal of the barotropic fluctuations, slower baroclinic transport variations are revealed, including a temporary stoppage of the lower NADW transport in the DWBC during November 2004.
605-623
Johns, W.E.
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Beal, L.M.
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Baringer, M.O.
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Molina, J.R.
ee05b16e-9d1c-415a-8d11-445b398aadcc
Cunningham, S.A.
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Kanzow, T.
ede4d92e-c4b2-48d0-83bf-a03f881aa819
Rayner, D.
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March 2008
Johns, W.E.
e69b0088-c832-4ed8-94f6-9c5e9e6f62af
Beal, L.M.
3939723a-86f3-4691-bd09-bf1ab2657c76
Baringer, M.O.
b8dab4b9-918b-4bc9-a033-dcbeb03f5730
Molina, J.R.
ee05b16e-9d1c-415a-8d11-445b398aadcc
Cunningham, S.A.
07f1bd78-d92f-478b-a016-b92f530142c3
Kanzow, T.
ede4d92e-c4b2-48d0-83bf-a03f881aa819
Rayner, D.
60eaf35c-c54e-447b-8551-efc08637d122
Johns, W.E., Beal, L.M., Baringer, M.O., Molina, J.R., Cunningham, S.A., Kanzow, T. and Rayner, D.
(2008)
Variability of shallow and deep western boundary currents off the Bahamas during 2004–05: results from the 26°N RAPID–MOC Array.
Journal of Physical Oceanography, 38 (3), .
(doi:10.1175/2007JPO3791.1).
Abstract
Data from an array of six moorings deployed east of Abaco, Bahamas, along 26.5°N during March 2004–May 2005 are analyzed. These moorings formed the western boundary array of a transbasin observing system designed to continuously monitor the meridional overturning circulation and meridional heat flux in the subtropical North Atlantic, under the framework of the joint U.K.–U.S. Rapid Climate Change (RAPID)–Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) Program. Important features of the western boundary circulation include the southward-flowing deep western boundary current (DWBC) below 1000 m and the northward-flowing “Antilles” Current in the upper 1000 m. Transports in the western boundary layer are estimated from direct current meter observations and from dynamic height moorings that measure the spatially integrated geostrophic flow between moorings. The results of these methods are combined to estimate the time-varying transports in the upper and deep ocean over the width of the western boundary layer to a distance of 500 km offshore of the Bahamas escarpment. The net southward transport of the DWBC across this region, inclusive of northward deep recirculation, is ?26.5 Sv (Sv 106 m3 s?1), which is divided nearly equally between upper (?13.9 Sv) and lower (?12.6 Sv) North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW). In the top 1000 m, 6.0 Sv flows northward in a thermocline-intensified jet near the western boundary. These transports are found to agree well with historical current meter data in the region collected between 1986 and 1997. Variability in both shallow and deep components of the circulation is large, with transports above 1000 m varying between ?15 and +25 Sv and deep transports varying between ?60 and +3 Sv. Much of this transport variability, associated with barotropic fluctuations, occurs on relatively short time scales of several days to a few weeks. Upon removal of the barotropic fluctuations, slower baroclinic transport variations are revealed, including a temporary stoppage of the lower NADW transport in the DWBC during November 2004.
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Published date: March 2008
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Local EPrints ID: 50924
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/50924
ISSN: 0022-3670
PURE UUID: f18b973f-7e0e-4de1-9db2-2a49b5e5586f
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Date deposited: 17 Apr 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:13
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Author:
W.E. Johns
Author:
L.M. Beal
Author:
M.O. Baringer
Author:
J.R. Molina
Author:
S.A. Cunningham
Author:
T. Kanzow
Author:
D. Rayner
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