Abstract

Abstract Data from satellite-tracked drifting buoys and VOS/XBT profiles for the years 1979–95 were used to evaluate the seasonal cycle of how major oceanic processes redistribute heat in the cold tongue region of the tropical Pacific. The most active processes for the annual cycle are local heat storage and heat export by entrainment of upwelling and by mean meridional advection. Heat export by zonal advection, however, is not negligible, and meridional eddy heat fluxes associated with tropical instability waves effect a negative feedback that offsets a considerable fraction of that produced by the mean meridional advection. All of these processes mimic the essentially one cycle per year of the surface wind stress, as do those of the depths of both the bottom of the surface mixed layer and the thermocline. Because it is associated with poleward Ekman transports, upwelling, and baroclinic adjustment near the equator, the zonal wind stress component appears to be the more important. The meridional wind str...

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