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Published December 2017 | Published
Journal Article Open

Variability of the Antarctic Slope Current System in the Northwestern Weddell Sea

Abstract

The dense water outflow from the Antarctic continental shelf is closely associated with the strength and position of the Antarctic Slope Front. This study explores the short-term and spatial variability of the Antarctic Slope Front system and the mechanisms that regulate cross-slope exchange using highly temporally and spatially resolved measurements from three ocean gliders deployed in 2012. The 22 sections along the eastern Antarctic Peninsula and west of the South Orkney Islands are grouped regionally and composited by isobaths. There is consistency in the front position around the Powell Basin, varying mostly between the 500- and 800-m isobaths. In most of the study area the flow is bottom intensified. The along-slope transport of the Antarctic Slope Current (upper 1000 m) varies between 0.2 and 5.9 Sv (1 Sv ≡ 10^6 m^3 s^(−1)) and does not exhibit a regional pattern. The magnitude of the velocity field shows substantial variability, up to twice its mean value. Higher eddy kinetic energy (0.003 m^2 s^(−2)) is observed in sections with dense water, possibly because of baroclinic instabilities in the bottom layer. Distributions of potential vorticity show an increase toward the shelf along isopycnals and also in the dense water layer. Glider sections located west of the South Orkney Islands indicate a northward direction of the flow associated with the Weddell Front, which differs from previous estimates of the mean circulation. This study provides some of the first observational confirmation of the high-frequency variability associated with an active eddy field that has been suggested by recent numerical simulations in this region.

Additional Information

© 2017 American Meteorological Society. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Manuscript received 14 February 2017, in final form 29 September 2017. The GENTOO project and glider deployments were supported by NERC Antarctic Funding Initiative Grant NE/H01439X/1. MVCA was supported by a CAPES-Brazil PhD scholarship (0876-14-3). AFT was supported by NSF Award OPP-1246460. We thank the crew, officers, and scientific party of cruise JR255 on board RRS James Clark Ross. The data for this paper are available from the British Oceanographic Data Centre (http://www.bodc.ac.uk/).

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August 22, 2023
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