4.6 Article

Contributions of wind forcing and surface heating to interannual sea level variations in the Atlantic Ocean

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 36, Issue 9, Pages 1739-1750

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JPO2935.1

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Interannual sea surface height variations in the Atlantic Ocean are examined from 10 years of high-precision altimeter data in light of simple mechanisms that describe the ocean response to atmospheric forcing: 1) local steric changes due to surface buoyancy forcing and a local response to wind stress via Ekman pumping and 2) baroclinic and barotropic oceanic adjustment via propagating Rossby waves and quasi-steady Sverdrup balance, respectively. The relevance of these simple mechanisms in explaining interannual sea level variability in the whole Atlantic Ocean is investigated. It is shown that, in various regions, a large part of the interannual sea level variability is related to local response to heat flux changes (more than 50% in the eastern North Atlantic). Except in a few places, a local response to wind stress forcing is less successful in explaining sea surface height observations. In this case, it is necessary to consider large-scale oceanic adjustments: the first baroclinic mode forced by wind stress explains about 70% of interannual sea level variations in the latitude band 18 degrees - 20 degrees N. A quasi-steady barotropic Sverdrup response is observed between 40 degrees and 50 degrees N.

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