Abstract

AbstractA 4-month glider mission was analyzed to assess turbulent dissipation in an anticyclonic eddy at the western boundary of the subtropical North Atlantic. The eddy (radius ≈ 60 km) had a core of low potential vorticity between 100 and 450 m, with maximum radial velocities of 0.5 m s−1 and Rossby number ≈ −0.1. Turbulent dissipation was inferred from vertical water velocities derived from the glider flight model. Dissipation was suppressed in the eddy core (ε ≈ 5 × 10−10 W kg−1) and enhanced below it (>10−9 W kg−1). Elevated dissipation was coincident with quasiperiodic structures in the vertical velocity and pressure perturbations, suggesting internal waves as the drivers of dissipation. A heuristic ray-tracing approximation was used to investigate the wave–eddy interactions leading to turbulent dissipation. Ray-tracing simulations were consistent with two types of wave–eddy interactions that may induce dissipation: the trapping of near-inertial wave energy by the eddy’s relative vorticity, or the entry of an internal tide (generated at the nearby continental slope) to a critical layer in the eddy shear. The latter scenario suggests that the intense mesoscale field characterizing the western boundaries of ocean basins might act as a “leaky wall” controlling the propagation of internal tides into the basin’s interior.

Highlights

  • Ocean turbulence plays a fundamental role in the transport of heat, freshwater, dissolved gases and other tracers in the ocean

  • An anticyclonic eddy was observed in situ at the western boundary of the North Atlantic subtropical gyre off the Great Abaco Island, Bahamas, during a 4-month glider survey (November 2017–February 2018)

  • Potential vorticity (PV) and apparent oxygen utilization were reduced within the core, and the cyclogeostrophic circulation around the eddy was subsurface intensified

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Summary

Introduction

Ocean turbulence plays a fundamental role in the transport of heat, freshwater, dissolved gases and other tracers in the ocean. Clément et al (2016) showed that the northward flow of anticyclonic eddies impinging on topography in our study area generates small-scale internal waves over the 600-m isobath, which we may be capturing with our glider observations.

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