4.7 Article

Mesoscale Variability, Critical Latitude and Eddy Mean Properties in the Tropical South-East Atlantic Ocean

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 128, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2022JC019050

Keywords

mesoscale variability; eddies; Rossby waves; Rhines scale; Rossby radius; critical latitude

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The equatorward decrease of mesoscale eddy abundance and the meridional variations of their mean properties in the tropical South-East Atlantic Ocean were investigated using geostrophic flows and two-dimensional geostrophic turbulence theories. Satellite-derived altimetric eddy kinetic energy density spectra were assessed in different latitude bands, revealing minimum energy spectra in the northern Angola Basin and the Angola Benguela Front. The analysis suggests a shift from nonlinear eddies to linear Rossby waves in the region, which could explain the lower abundance of eddies compared to other regions in the world oceans.
Equatorward decrease of mesoscale eddy abundance, and meridional variations of their mean properties in the tropical South-East Atlantic Ocean have been investigated on the basis of horizontal length-scales of geostrophic flows, and theories of two-dimensional geostrophic turbulence on a fl-plane. Meridional variations of satellite-derived altimetric eddy kinetic energy density spectra were assessed in bins of 5 degrees, from 5 degrees S to 25 degrees S, zonally averaged between 8 degrees W and 15 degrees E. They revealed two latitudinal bands of minimum eddy energy spectra: one in the northern Angola Basin (5 degrees S-10 degrees S) and the other across the Angola Benguela Front (15 degrees S-20 degrees S). In the latter, both the eddy forcing scale and the Rhines scale were observed at wavelengths of 300 and 350 km respectively, suggesting that only a small spectral range exists for eddies to grow. On the other hand, in the former, the eddy forcing scale and the Rhines scale were observed at wavelengths of 454 and 520 km respectively. The ratio between the Rhines scale and the first baroclinic Rossby radius revealed an onset of a critical latitude at about 11.4 degrees S. Consistently, maps of eddy frequency of occurrence computed from eddies identified in the region has shown a notable decay in signal of the eddy density distribution around that latitude. This could explain the sharp equatorward transition of mesoscale processes observed in this region, which seems to shift from nonlinear eddies to linear Rossby waves, potentially explaining why fewer eddies are observed in the region when compared to other regions of the world oceans.

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