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Published March 16, 2016 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Seasonality of submesoscale flows in the ocean surface boundary layer

Abstract

A signature of submesoscale flows in the upper ocean is skewness in the distribution of relative vorticity. Expected to result for high Rossby number flows, such skewness has implications for mixing, dissipation, and stratification within the upper ocean. An array of moorings deployed in the Northeast Atlantic for 1 year as part of the experiment of the Ocean Surface Mixing, Ocean Submesoscale Interaction Study (OSMOSIS) reveals that relative vorticity is positively skewed during winter even though the scale of the Rossby number is less than 0.5. Furthermore, this skewness is reduced to zero during spring and autumn. There is also evidence of modest seasonal variations in the gradient Rossby number. The proposed mechanism by which relative vorticity is skewed is that the ratio of lateral to vertical buoyancy gradients, as summarized by the inverse gradient Richardson number, restricts its range during winter but less so at other times of the year. These results support recent observations and model simulations suggesting that the upper ocean is host to a seasonal cycle in submesoscale turbulence.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Received 28 JAN 2016; Accepted 16 FEB 2016; Accepted article online 20 FEB 2016; Published online 11 MAR 2016. We are grateful to the engineers and scientists at NMFSS, captain and crew of the RRS Discovery, RRS James Cook, and R/V Celtic Explorer, and numerous scientists and technicians that helped during deployment and recovery of the moorings/gliders. We would like to thank the following individuals for fruitful discussions: Paul Provost, Alex Forryan, Xiaolong Yu, Tasha Lucas, Guillaume Roullet, Kurt Polzin, John Taylor, Darren Ryder, Bob Leben, and Harry Bryden. Sybren Drijfiout, Joël Hirschi, and Andrew Coward kindly provided 1/12° NEMO SST. We acknowledge the use of IMP software by Lutz Helmbrecht. All data are archived at the British Oceanographic Data Centre. This research was funded by grants from the Natural Environmental Research Council (NE/I019999/1 and NE/I019905/1) and National Science Foundation (NSF-OCE 1155676).

Attached Files

Published - Buckingham_et_al-2016-Geophysical_Research_Letters.pdf

Supplemental Material - grl54082-sup-0001-supinfo.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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