Abstract

<p>Since 2010, space missions dedicated to Sea Surface Salinity (SSS) have been providing observations with almost complete coverage of the global ocean and a resolution of about 45 km every 3 days. The European Space Agency (ESA) Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission was the first orbiting radiometer to collect regular SSS observations from space. The Aquarius and SMAP (Soil Moisture Active-Passive) missions of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) then reinforced the SSS observing system between mid-2011 and mid-2015 and since mid-2015, respectively.</p><p>Using the most recent SSS Climate Change Initiative project dataset merging data from the 3 missions, this study investigates the SSS signal associated with mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean. Eddies location and characteristics are obtained from the daily v3 mesoscale eddy trajectory atlas produced by CLS. SSS anomalies along the eddies journey are computed and compared to Sea Surface Temperature (SST) anomalies (v4 Remote Sensing Systems) as well as the SubAntarctic Front (SAF) position (CTOH, LEGOS). The vertical structure of the eddies is further investigated using profiles from colocated Argo autonomous floats.<span> </span></p><p>This study highlights a robust signal in SSS depending on both the eddies rotation (cyclone/anticyclone) and latitudinal position with respect to the SAF. Moreover, this dependence is not found in SST. These observations reveal oceanic the interaction of eddies with the larger scale ocean water masses. SSS and SST anomalies composites indeed show different patterns either bi-poles linked with horizontal stirring of fronts, mono-poles from trapping water or vertical mixing changes, or a mix of the two.</p><p>This analysis gives strong hints for the erosion of subsurface waters, such as mode waters, induced by enhanced mixing caused by the deep-reaching eddies of the southern ocean.</p>

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