Abstract

Abstract RAFOS float trajectories near the 27.5 density level were analyzed to investigate discrete eddies in the northern North Atlantic with the objective of determining their geographical distribution and characteristics. Floats that made two or more consecutive loops in the same direction (loopers) were considered to have been in an eddy. Overall 15% (24 float years) of the float data were in loopers. One hundred and eight loopers were identified in 96 different eddies. Roughly half of the eddies were cyclonic (49%) and half were anticyclonic (51%), although the percentages varied in different regions. A few eddies were quasi-stationary for long times, one for over a year in the Iceland Basin, and many others clearly translated, often in the direction of the general circulation as observed by non-looping floats. Several floats were trapped in eddies in the vicinity of the North Atlantic Current just upstream (west) of the Charlie Gibbs (52°N) and Faraday (50°N) Fracture Zones, which seem to be preferred routes for flow crossing the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Five floats looped in four anticyclones that translated southwestward away from the eastern boundary near the Goban Spur (47–50°N). These could have been weak meddies forming from remnants of warm salty Mediterranean Water advected northward along the eastern boundary.

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