Mesoscale to Submesoscale Transition in the California Current System. Part II: Frontal Processes
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Physical Oceanography
- Vol. 38 (1), 44-64
- https://doi.org/10.1175/2007jpo3672.1
Abstract
This is the second of three papers investigating the regime transition that occurs in numerical simulations for an idealized, equilibrium, subtropical, eastern boundary, upwelling current system similar to the California Current. The emergent upper-ocean submesoscale fronts are analyzed from phenomenological and dynamical perspectives, using a combination of composite averaging and separation of distinctive subregions of the flow. The initiating dynamical process for the transition is near-surface frontogenesis. The frontal behavior is similar to both observed meteorological surface fronts and solutions of the approximate dynamical model called surface dynamics (i.e., uniform interior potential vorticity q and diagnostic force balance) in the intensification of surface density gradients and secondary circulations in response to a mesoscale strain field. However, there are significant behavioral differences compared to the surface-dynamics model. Wind stress acts on fronts through nonlinear Ekman ... Abstract This is the second of three papers investigating the regime transition that occurs in numerical simulations for an idealized, equilibrium, subtropical, eastern boundary, upwelling current system similar to the California Current. The emergent upper-ocean submesoscale fronts are analyzed from phenomenological and dynamical perspectives, using a combination of composite averaging and separation of distinctive subregions of the flow. The initiating dynamical process for the transition is near-surface frontogenesis. The frontal behavior is similar to both observed meteorological surface fronts and solutions of the approximate dynamical model called surface dynamics (i.e., uniform interior potential vorticity q and diagnostic force balance) in the intensification of surface density gradients and secondary circulations in response to a mesoscale strain field. However, there are significant behavioral differences compared to the surface-dynamics model. Wind stress acts on fronts through nonlinear Ekman ...Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mesoscale to Submesoscale Transition in the California Current System. Part I: Flow Structure, Eddy Flux, and Observational TestsJournal of Physical Oceanography, 2008
- Mixed Layer Instabilities and RestratificationJournal of Physical Oceanography, 2007
- Sea surface temperature fronts in the California Current System from geostationary satellite observationsJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 2006
- Active and passive fields face to faceNew Journal of Physics, 2004
- On Frontal Dynamics in Two Model OceansJournal of Physical Oceanography, 2002
- Sensitivity of Cyclogenesis to Sea Surface Temperature in the Northwestern AtlanticMonthly Weather Review, 2001
- Gravitational, Symmetric, and Baroclinic Instability of the Ocean Mixed LayerJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1998
- Short‐wave length instabilities on coastal jets and frontsJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1994
- The stability of a two-dimensional vorticity filament under uniform strainJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1991
- Uniform Potential Vorticity Flow: Part I. Theory of Wave Interactions and Two-Dimensional TurbulenceJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1978