Abstract

AbstractOcean circulation is dominated by turbulent geostrophic eddy fields with typical scales ranging from 10 to 300 km. At mesoscales (>50 km), the size of eddy structures varies regionally following the Rossby radius of deformation. The variability of the scale of smaller eddies is not well known due to the limitations in existing numerical simulations and satellite capability. Nevertheless, it is well established that oceanic flows (<50 km) generally exhibit strong seasonality. In this study, we present a basin‐scale analysis of coherent structures down to 10 km in the North Atlantic Ocean using two submesoscale‐permitting ocean models, a NEMO‐based North Atlantic simulation with a horizontal resolution of 1/60 (NATL60) and an HYCOM‐based Atlantic simulation with a horizontal resolution of 1/50 (HYCOM50). We investigate the spatial and temporal variability of the scale of eddy structures with a particular focus on eddies with scales of 10 to 100 km, and examine the impact of the seasonality of submesoscale energy on the seasonality and distribution of coherent structures in the North Atlantic. Our results show an overall good agreement between the two models in terms of surface wave number spectra and seasonal variability. The key findings of the paper are that (i) the mean size of ocean eddies show strong seasonality; (ii) this seasonality is associated with an increased population of submesoscale eddies (10–50 km) in winter; and (iii) the net release of available potential energy associated with mixed layer instability is responsible for the emergence of the increased population of submesoscale eddies in wintertime.

Highlights

  • Ocean circulation combines large (>500 km), meso (50–500 km) and submesoscale (1–50 km) structures that result from direct forcing and energy exchanges through nonlinear scale interactions

  • The key findings of the paper are that (i) the mean size of ocean eddies show strong seasonality; (ii) this seasonality is associated with an increased population of submesoscale eddies (10–50 km) in winter; and (iii) the net release of available potential energy associated with mixed layer instability is responsible for the emergence of the increased population of submesoscale eddies in wintertime

  • The spatial and temporal variability of the typical size of oceanic eddies smaller than 100 km is investigated in this study using two submesoscale-permitting ocean model simulations of the North Atlantic; NATL60 and HYCOM50

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Summary

Introduction

Ocean circulation combines large (>500 km), meso (50–500 km) and submesoscale (1–50 km) structures that result from direct forcing and energy exchanges through nonlinear scale interactions. Several ocean models, such as the NEMO-based North Atlantic simulation with a horizontal resolution of 1/60◦ (NATL60) and the HYCOM-based Atlantic simulation with a horizontal resolution of 1/50◦ (HYCOM50), were designed in preparation for the upcoming Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) altimeter mission (Fu & Ubelmann, 2014) These simulations have the ability to capture explicitly ocean circulation at the basin scale down to 10 km and provide a platform to investigate the variability of eddy structures at scales less than 100 km. This is done by first performing a basin-scale analysis of the spatial and temporal variability of coherent structures down to 10 km in the North Atlantic Ocean using two submesoscale resolving ocean models, NATL60 and HYCOM50.

Data Sets and Methodology
Temporal Variability of Eddy Scale
Spatial Variability of Eddy Scale
Impact of Submesoscale Energy on Eddy Scale Variability
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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