Abstract

Mesoscale eddies are common in the ocean and their surface characteristics have been well revealed based on altimetric observations. Comparatively, the knowledge of the three-dimensional (3D) structure of mesoscale eddies is scarce, especially in the open ocean. In the present study, high-resolution field observations of a cyclonic eddy in the Kuroshio Extension have been carried out and the anatomy of the observed eddy is conducted. The temperature anomaly exhibits a vertical monopole cone structure with a maximum of −7.3 °C located in the main thermocline. The salinity anomaly shows a vertical dipole structure with a fresh anomaly in the main thermocline and a saline anomaly in the North Pacific Intermediate Water (NPIW). The cyclonic flow displays an equivalent barotropic structure. The mixed layer is deep in the center of the eddy and thin in the periphery. The seasonal thermocline is intensified and the permanent thermocline is upward domed by 350 m. The subtropical mode water (STMW) straddled between the seasonal and permanent thermoclines weakens and dissipates in the eddy center. The salinity of NPIW distributed along the isopycnals shows no significant difference inside and outside the eddy. The geostrophic relation is approximately set up in the eddy. The nonlinearity—defined as the ratio between the rotational speed to the translational speed—is 12.5 and decreases with depth. The eddy-wind interaction is examined by high resolution satellite observations. The results show that the cold eddy induces wind stress aloft with positive divergence and negative curl. The wind induced upwelling process is responsible for the formation of the horizontal monopole pattern of salinity, while the horizontal transport results in the horizontal dipole structure of temperature in the mixed layer.

Highlights

  • Mesoscale eddies, characterized by horizontal scale of 100 km, time scale of 100 days and swirl speed of 10 cm s−1, are almost everywhere in the ocean

  • The mesoscale eddy investigated in the present study initially formed at the location (166.375◦ E, 32.875◦ N) on January 23, 2014, when it pinched off from the southward curved Kuroshio Extension

  • The region of the survey is located at the Shatsky Rise, where the eddy was at its mature stage and maintained an intensification tendency

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Summary

Introduction

Mesoscale eddies, characterized by horizontal scale of 100 km, time scale of 100 days and swirl speed of 10 cm s−1 , are almost everywhere in the ocean. The field experiments of eddies can be traced back to the 1970s, that is, the Mid-Ocean Dynamics Experiment [2] and POLYMODE [3], were conducted in the western North Atlantic. Lots of follow-up field experiments have been conducted, such as the E-Flux experiment in the subtropical North Pacific [4], eddy dynamics, mixing, export and Atmosphere 2019, 10, 553 ; doi:10.3390/atmos10090553 www.mdpi.com/journal/atmosphere. Atmosphere 2019, 10, 553 species composition (EDDIES) in the Sargasso Sea off Bermuda [5], meso- and submesoscale processes in an intense front (AlborEx) [6] and the northwestern Pacific eddies, internal waves and mixing. Experiment (NPEIM) [7], and so forth. Main observation methods for field experiment include Argo floats, moored instrumentation, underwater gliders and shipboard survey

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