Formation of intrathermocline eddies at ocean fronts by wind-driven destruction of potential vorticity
Formation of intrathermocline eddies at ocean fronts by wind-driven destruction of potential vorticity
Date
2008-02
Authors
Thomas, Leif N.
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Keywords
Fronts
Eddies
Potential vorticity
Subduction
Eddies
Potential vorticity
Subduction
Abstract
A mechanism for the generation of intrathermocline eddies (ITEs) at wind-forced
fronts is examined using a high resolution numerical simulation. Favorable conditions
for ITE formation result at fronts forced by “down-front” winds, i.e. winds
blowing in the direction of the frontal jet. Down-front winds exert frictional forces
that reduce the potential vorticity (PV) within the surface boundary in the frontal
outcrop, providing a source for the low-PV water that is the materia prima of ITEs.
Meandering of the front drives vertical motions that subduct the low-PV water into
the pycnocline, pooling it into the coherent anticyclonic vortex of a submesoscale
ITE. As the fluid is subducted along the outcropping frontal isopycnal, the low-PV
water, which at the surface is associated with strongly baroclinic flow, re-expresses
itself as water with nearly zero absolute vorticity. This generation of strong anticyclonic
vorticity results from the tilting of the horizontal vorticity of the frontal
jet, not from vortex squashing. During the formation of the ITE, high-PV water
from the pycnocline is upwelled alongside the subducting low-PV surface water. The
positive correlation between the ITE’s velocity and PV fields results in an upward,
along-isopycnal eddy PV flux that scales with the surface frictional PV flux driven
by the wind. The relationship between the eddy and wind-induced frictional PV
flux is nonlocal in time, as the eddy PV flux persists long after the wind forcing is
shut off. The ITE’s PV flux affects the large-scale flow by driving an eddy-induced
transport or bolus velocity down the outcropping isopycnal layer with a magnitude
that scales with the Ekman velocity.
Description
Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Dynamics of Atmospheres and Oceans45 (2008): 252-273, doi:10.1016/j.dynatmoce.2008.02.002.