Abstract

Abstract. The net heat flux and meridional temperature advection in the ocean are two factors in the North Pacific subtropical sea surface temperature front (NPSTF) frontogenesis occurring from October to the following February. However, the relative importance of these two factors has been rarely explored. In this study, frontogenesis of the NPSTF is examined quantitatively based on the mixed-layer heat budget equation to clarify the relative importance of net heat flux and meridional temperature advection and to further explore its connection with the atmosphere above. Diagnosis results show that the net heat flux dominates the frontogenesis from October to December, while the meridional temperature advection in the ocean contributes equally as or even more than the net heat flux in January and February. The atmosphere is critical to the frontogenesis of the NPSTF, including the direct effect of the net heat flux and the indirect effect through the Aleutian low. Further analyses demonstrate that the latent heat flux (the shortwave radiation) dominates the net heat flux in October (from November to February). The meridional temperature advection in the ocean is mostly due to the meridional Ekman convergence, which is related to the Aleutian low. Climatologically, the strengthening and southward migration of the Aleutian low from October to the following February are characterized by the acceleration and southward shift of the westerly wind to the south, respectively, which can drive southward ocean currents. Correspondingly, the southward ocean currents provide for colder meridional advection to the north of the NPSTF in January and February, favoring frontogenesis. In addition, the Aleutian low plays a role in transforming the dominant effect of the net heat flux into the joint effect of meridional temperature advection and net heat flux in January.

Highlights

  • The North Pacific Ocean is featured by two zonal sea surface temperature (SST) fronts at the midlatitudes and subtropics, respectively

  • We mainly focus on the frontogenesis period of the North Pacific subtropical SST front (NPSTF), which is from October to the following February when the gradient magnitude (GM) tendency is significantly positive

  • Previous studies have demonstrated that both net heat flux and meridional temperature advection in the ocean contribute to NPSTF frontogenesis (Kazmin and Rienecker, 1996; Dinniman and Rienecker, 1999)

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Summary

Introduction

The North Pacific Ocean is featured by two zonal sea surface temperature (SST) fronts at the midlatitudes and subtropics, respectively. Kazmin and Rienecker (1996) diagnosed the mixed-layer heat budget equation using observation data from 1982 to 1990 and pointed out that both the net heat flux and the Ekman convergence are frontogenetic and important to provide the observed frontogenesis in winter, rather than the Ekman convergence alone This finding is further confirmed by Dinniman and Rienecker (1999) based on a 10-year (1985–1995) simulation of a primitive equation model (Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory’s MOM2). This paper aims to figure out the relative importance of the net heat flux and the oceanic meridional temperature advection (including the Ekman convergence) in the frontogenesis of the NPSTF, especially the role of the atmosphere in this process.

Data and methods
The mixed-layer heat budget equation
Definition of the mixed-layer depth
Frontogenesis of the NPSTF
SST variation
GM variation
Decomposition of the net heat flux
Cold meridional advection
Conclusion and discussion
Full Text
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