Abstract

Abstract Eddies in the northwestern tropical Atlantic Ocean play a crucial role in transporting the South Atlantic Upper Ocean Water to the North Atlantic and connect the Atlantic and the Caribbean Sea. Although surface characteristics of those eddies have been well studied, their vertical structures and governing mechanisms are much less known. Here, using a time-dependent energetics framework based on the multiscale window transform, we examine the seasonal variability of the eddy kinetic energy (EKE) in the northwestern tropical Atlantic. Both altimeter-based data and ocean reanalyses show a substantial EKE seasonal cycle in the North Brazil Current Retroflection (NBCR) region that is mostly trapped in the upper 200 m. In the most energetic NBCR region, the EKE reaches its minimum in April–June and maximum in July–September. By analyzing six ocean reanalysis products, we find that barotropic instability is the controlling mechanism for the seasonal eddy variability in the NBCR region. Nonlocal processes, including advection and pressure work, play opposite roles in the EKE seasonal cycle. In the eastern part of the NBCR region, the EKE seasonal evolution is similar to the NBCR region. However, it is the nonlocal processes that control the EKE seasonality. In the western part of the NBCR region, the EKE magnitude is one order of magnitude smaller than in the NBCR region and shows a different seasonal cycle, which peaks in March and reaches its minimum in October–November. Our results highlight the complex mechanisms governing eddy variability in the northwestern tropical Atlantic and provide insights into their potential changes with changing background conditions.

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