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Surface circulation and fronts of the South Pacific Ocean, east of 120°W
Author(s) -
Chaigneau Alexis,
Pizarro Oscar
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2004gl022070
Subject(s) - oceanography , front (military) , hydrography , geology , anticyclone , latitude , ocean current , subtropical front , circulation (fluid dynamics) , climatology , subtropics , polar front , pacific ocean , circumpolar star , circumpolar deep water , range (aeronautics) , thermohaline circulation , water mass , north atlantic deep water , physics , thermodynamics , materials science , geodesy , fishery , biology , composite material
The South Pacific surface circulation east of 120°W is studied, using satellite tracked drifters from 1979–2004. The major currents of this region are described such as the Antarctic Circumpolar, the South Pacific, the Chile‐Peru and the Cape Horn Currents. We suggest the presence of a branch, exiting from the ACC between 100–120°W, and transporting subantarctic surface water toward lower latitudes. We also show the existence of an anticyclonic recirculation cell north of 35°S. Finally, based on hydrographic sections, we show that in the eastern South Pacific the core of the Subtropical front corresponds to the 14°C isotherm at 150 m depths and to the 2.7 m of dynamic height relative to 3000 m. The Subantarctic front is located by maximum temperature gradients in the range 3–8°C at 100–400 m depth.