Abstract

AbstractThe shallow depth of the inner continental shelf allows for rapid adjustment of the ocean to air‐sea exchange of heat and momentum compared with offshore locations. Observations during 2001–2013 are used to evaluate the contributions of air‐sea heat flux and oceanic advection to interannual variability of inner‐shelf temperature in the Middle Atlantic Bight. Wintertime processes are important for interpreting regional interannual variability at nearshore locations since winter anomalies account for 69–77% of the variance of the annual anomalies and are correlated over broad along‐shelf scales, from New England to North Carolina. At the Martha's Vineyard Coastal Observatory on the 12 m isobath, a heat budget is used to test the hypothesis that interannual differences in winter temperatures are due solely to air‐sea heat flux. Bimonthly averages of air‐sea heat flux are correlated with temporal changes in temperature, but overestimate the observed wintertime cooling. Velocity and satellite‐derived temperature data show that interannual variability in wintertime surface cooling is partially compensated for by alongshore advection of warmer water from the west at this particular location. It is also shown that surface heat flux is a strong function of air‐sea temperature difference. Because of this coupling between ocean and air temperatures in shallow water, along‐shelf advection can significantly modify the surface heat flux at seasonal and interannual time scales. While along‐shelf advection at relatively small (∼100 km) scales can be an important component of the heat budget over the inner shelf, interannual temperature variability is still largely determined by adjustment to large‐scale air‐temperature anomalies.

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