Abstract

Abstract A cold eddy was observed in late March and early April 1975 to encounter the eastern boundary of the Gulf Stream and entrain warm Gulf Stream water into its outer fringes. Available evidence indicated that the entrainment of Gulf Stream water in the western and southern portions of the eddy enhanced the density stratification creating available potential energy which led to an increase in kinetic energy in those regions. A secondary, cold perturbation with a high-salinity core was detected south of the center of the cold eddy. It was not clear from the data whether the conversion of available potential energy into kinetic energy increased the kinetic energy of the cold eddy, produced the secondary perturbation, or both.

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