4.6 Article

Broadband Submesoscale Vorticity Generated by Flow around an Island

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 1301-1317

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0161.1

Keywords

Ageostrophic circulations; Eddies; Nonlinear dynamics; Small scale processes; Topographic effects

Categories

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [N00014-16-WX01186, N00014-15-1-2488, N00014-15-1-2592, N00014-15-1-2264, N00014-15-1-2302, N00014-16-1-3070, N00014-18-1-2406]

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This study examines the submesoscale vorticity generated by upper-ocean flows around Palau using an array of moorings. The research reveals a complex relationship between vorticity and various oceanic forces, suggesting that the formation of vorticity is influenced by factors such as Coriolis force, tides, and inertial oscillations. Additionally, the study highlights the nonlinear relationship between subinertial velocity and superinertial vorticity, as well as the impact of strong westward flows on tidal bands vorticity.
An array of moorings deployed off the coast of Palau is used to characterize submesoscale vorticity generated by broadband upper-ocean flows around the island. Palau is a steep-sided archipelago lying in the path of strong zonal geostrophic currents, but tides and inertial oscillations are energetic as well. Vorticity is correspondingly broadband, with both mean and variance O(f) in a surface and subsurface layer (where f is the local Coriolis frequency). However, while subinertial vorticity is linearly related to the incident subinertial current, the relationship between superinertial velocity and superinertial vorticity is weak. Instead, there is a strong nonlinear relationship between subinertial velocity and superinertial vorticity. A key observation of this study is that during periods of strong westward flow, vorticity in the tidal bands increases by an order of magnitude. Empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs) of velocity show this nonstationary, superinertial vorticity variance is due to eddy motion at the scale of the array. Comparison of kinetic energy and vorticity time series suggest that lateral shear against the island varies with the subinertial flow, while tidal currents lead to flow reversals inshore of the recirculating wake and possibly eddy shedding. This is a departure from the idealized analog typically drawn on in island wake studies: a cylinder in a steady flow. In that case, eddy formation occurs at a frequency dependent on the scale of the obstacle and strength of the flow alone. The observed tidal formation frequency likely modulates the strength of submesoscale wake eddies and thus their dynamic relationship to the mesoscale wake downstream of Palau.

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