4.7 Article

Atlantic Equatorial Undercurrent and associated cold tongue variability

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 112, Issue C6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2006JC003931

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The Atlantic Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC) is studied using a simulation for the period 1990-2002 with a high-resolution ocean general circulation model. Simulated transports of the EUC that supplies the annual mean upwelling in the central and eastern equatorial Atlantic are in good agreement with new transport estimates derived from ship observations, i.e., 19.9 and 14.0 Sv at 35 degrees W and 23 degrees W, respectively. Although the observations are not conclusive concerning the seasonal cycle of EUC transports, the simulated seasonal cycles fit largely in the observed range. The analysis of the EUC variability associated with interannual boreal summer variability of the equatorial cold tongue showed that cold tongue indices, defined either by near-surface temperature or steric height anomalies, are anticorrelated with thermocline EUC transport anomalies: A strong EUC corresponds to low near-surface temperatures and steric heights. The importance of equatorial waves for the cold tongue region is shown: Surface layer transport anomalies at 23 degrees W and 10 degrees W are significantly correlated with both near-surface temperature and steric height anomalies in the equatorial and coastal upwelling regions, indicating an associated eastward phase propagation along the equator toward the African coast where the signal bifurcates into two poleward branches along the coast and is reflected into a westward propagating wave.

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