Abstract
The three-dimensional thermohaline. sound velocity and baroclinic flow structure of the. pacific sub-tropical front during January and February 1990 are discussed. The front is meander-like, with a wavelength of 180 km, a wave amplitude of 55 km, and is centered around latitude 30°N. On 37 km spatial and 10-day time scales the front barely moves, but its intensity increases due to an intrusion of cold and low-salinity water from the north. The front is nearly vertical in the upper 130 m and slopes southward below. The strongest cross-frontal differences are 1.7°C for temperature, 0.6‰ for salinity. 0.4 kg m−3 for density and 13 m s−1 for sound velocity and occur beneath the base of the mixed Layer. The baroclinic flow field indicates a meandering current with maximum speeds of 0.3 m s−1. Cyclonic eddies occur north and anti-cyclonic eddies occur south of the front. Satellite-tracked drifters confirm these patterns. Vertical shear of the baroclinic flow in the frontal region varies between 10−4 and 10−3 s−1 and is strongest below the base of the mixed layer. The principle of conservation of potential vorticity is applied to fronts and compared to observations.
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