A large‐amplitude meander of the shelfbreak front during summer south of New England: Observations from the Shelfbreak PRIMER experiment
Author(s) -
Gawarkiewicz Glen,
Brink Kenneth H.,
Bahr Frank,
Beardsley Robert C.,
Caruso Michael,
Lynch James F.,
Chiu ChingSang
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2002jc001468
Subject(s) - geology , meander (mathematics) , frontogenesis , baroclinity , front (military) , rossby wave , bathythermograph , geostrophic wind , amplitude , current meter , geodesy , internal tide , vorticity , oceanography , climatology , internal wave , mesoscale meteorology , meteorology , vortex , physics , geometry , mathematics , quantum mechanics
In order to examine spatial and temporal variability of the shelfbreak front during peak stratification, repeated surveys using a towed undulating vehicle (SeaSoar) are used to describe the evolution of shelfbreak frontal structure during 26 July to 1 August 1996 south of New England. Spatial correlation ( e ‐folding) scales for the upper 60 m of the water column were generally between 8 and 15 km for temperature, salinity, and velocity. Temporal correlation scales were about 1 day. The frontal variability was dominated by the passage of a westward propagating meander that had a wavelength of 40 km, a propagation speed of 0.11 m s −1 , and an amplitude of 15 km (30 km from crest to trough). Along‐front geostrophic velocities (referenced to a shipboard acoustic Doppler current profilers) were as large as 0.45 m s −1 , although subject to significant along‐front variations. The relative vorticity within the jet was large, with a maximum 0.6 of the local value of the Coriolis parameter. Seaward of the front, a small detached eddy consisting of shelf water was present with a diameter of approximately 15 km. Ageostrophic contributions to the velocity field are estimated to be as large as 0.3 m s −1 in regions of sharp curvature within the meander. These observations strongly suggest that during at least some time periods, shelfbreak exchange is nonlinear (large Rossby number) and dominated by features on a horizontal scale of order 10 km.
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