Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring Forties

In the austral summer of 1992–1993 the passage of a storm system drove a strong upper ocean response at 45°S in the mid-South Atlantic. Good in situ observations were obtained. CTD casts revealed that the mixed layer deepened by ~40 m over 4 days. Wind stirring dominated over buoyancy flux-drive...

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Main Author: R. Marsh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 1995-10-01
Series:Annales Geophysicae
Online Access:https://www.ann-geophys.net/13/1027/1995/angeo-13-1027-1995.pdf
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spelling doaj-0534f9382cba48f98f09cbe993aa05a32020-11-25T00:26:01ZengCopernicus PublicationsAnnales Geophysicae0992-76891432-05761995-10-01131027103810.1007/s00585-995-1027-6Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring FortiesR. MarshIn the austral summer of 1992–1993 the passage of a storm system drove a strong upper ocean response at 45°S in the mid-South Atlantic. Good in situ observations were obtained. CTD casts revealed that the mixed layer deepened by ~40 m over 4 days. Wind stirring dominated over buoyancy flux-driven mixing during the onset of high winds. Doppler shear currents further reveal this to be intimately related to inertial dynamics. The penetration depth of inertial currents, which are confined to the mixed layer, increases with time after a wind event, matched by a downward propagation of low values of the Richardson number. This suggests that inertial current shear is instrumental in producing turbulence at the base of the mixed layer. Evolution of inertial transport is simulated using a time series of ship-observed wind stress. Simulated transport is only 30–50% of the observed transport, suggesting that much of the observed inertial motion was forced by an earlier (possibly remote) storm. Close proximity of the subtropical front further complicates the upper ocean response to the storm. A simple heat balance for the upper 100 m reveals that surface cooling and mixing (during the storm) can account for only a small fraction of an apparent ~1 °C mixed layer cooling.https://www.ann-geophys.net/13/1027/1995/angeo-13-1027-1995.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. Marsh
spellingShingle R. Marsh
Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring Forties
Annales Geophysicae
author_facet R. Marsh
author_sort R. Marsh
title Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring Forties
title_short Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring Forties
title_full Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring Forties
title_fullStr Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring Forties
title_full_unstemmed Observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the South Atlantic Roaring Forties
title_sort observations of the upper ocean response to storm forcing in the south atlantic roaring forties
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Annales Geophysicae
issn 0992-7689
1432-0576
publishDate 1995-10-01
description In the austral summer of 1992–1993 the passage of a storm system drove a strong upper ocean response at 45°S in the mid-South Atlantic. Good in situ observations were obtained. CTD casts revealed that the mixed layer deepened by ~40 m over 4 days. Wind stirring dominated over buoyancy flux-driven mixing during the onset of high winds. Doppler shear currents further reveal this to be intimately related to inertial dynamics. The penetration depth of inertial currents, which are confined to the mixed layer, increases with time after a wind event, matched by a downward propagation of low values of the Richardson number. This suggests that inertial current shear is instrumental in producing turbulence at the base of the mixed layer. Evolution of inertial transport is simulated using a time series of ship-observed wind stress. Simulated transport is only 30–50% of the observed transport, suggesting that much of the observed inertial motion was forced by an earlier (possibly remote) storm. Close proximity of the subtropical front further complicates the upper ocean response to the storm. A simple heat balance for the upper 100 m reveals that surface cooling and mixing (during the storm) can account for only a small fraction of an apparent ~1 °C mixed layer cooling.
url https://www.ann-geophys.net/13/1027/1995/angeo-13-1027-1995.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT rmarsh observationsoftheupperoceanresponsetostormforcinginthesouthatlanticroaringforties
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