The interaction between warm-core rings and submarine canyons and its influence on the onshore transport of offshore waters
The interaction between warm-core rings and submarine canyons and its influence on the onshore transport of offshore waters
Date
2021-12-13
Authors
Li, Xiaodan
Zhang, Weifeng G.
Rong, Zengrui
Zhang, Weifeng G.
Rong, Zengrui
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DOI
10.1029/2021JC017989
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Keywords
Warm-core ring
Submarine canyon
Topographic influence
Cross-shelf exchange
Upwelling
Eddy
Submarine canyon
Topographic influence
Cross-shelf exchange
Upwelling
Eddy
Abstract
Gulf Stream warm-core rings (WCRs) impinging onto the Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB) shelf edge can induce substantial water exchange between the shelf and slope seas. Combining satellite imagery and idealized ocean models, this study investigates the long-neglected influence of submarine canyons on the WCR impingement process. Satellite images show onshore intrusion of the WCR water concentrated near the MAB shelf-break canyons, indicating canyon-induced enhancement of cross-shelf exchange. Model simulations of the ring-canyon interaction qualitatively reproduce the observed pattern and show greatly enhanced vertical motions and cross-shelf transport in a canyon. The ring-induced transient flow in a canyon resolved by the model is consistent with the three-dimensional canyon circulation driven by ambient along-slope steady flows as depicted in the literature. Cross-isobath flows occur over both canyon slopes with a strong upwelling onshore flow over the slope upstream to the coastal-trapped wave propagation (the upwave slope) and a weak downwelling offshore flow over the downwave slope. To conserve potential vorticity, a subsurface-intensified cyclonic eddy is formed inside the canyon, which interacts with the sloping bottom and enhances the upwelling onshore flow over the upwave slope. The upwelled deep ring water is transported either back offshore by the ring-edge current on the upwave side of the canyon or across the canyon onto the downwave shelf forming a localized bulge pattern. While the former is an ephemeral onshore transport process, the latter represents a more sustained onshore transport of the ring water, both of which have major implication for ecosystem dynamics at the shelf edge.
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Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2021. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans 126(12), (2021): e2021JC017989, https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JC017989.
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Citation
Li, X., Zhang, W., & Rong, Z. (2021). The interaction between warm-core rings and submarine canyons and its influence on the onshore transport of offshore waters. Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 126(12), e2021JC017989.