Abstract

Abstract Sea surface height (SSH) anomalies from the Geosat altimeter for the northeast Pacific Ocean were analysed to determine their annual and interannual fluctuations over a 2.5-year period. The interannual anomalies suggested large-scale changes in the intensity of the California and Alaska currents, with a weak California Current for the first year (1986–1987), which strengthened during the second year, partly by a diversion of flow from the Alaskan gyre into the California Current and partly by a decrease in SSH along the coast. In the California Current between about 36° and 46°N, the annual fluctuations in SSH showed westward phase propagation. These observations were modeled using a linearized potential vorticity equation with one active layer, forced by realistic wind stress curl, which resembled a standing wave. The annual fluctuations in SSH were produced primarily by Ekman pumping, because Rossby waves are coastally trapped poleward of about 37°N. The predicted response had excellent phase a...

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