4.6 Article

Heat balance and eddies in the Peru-Chile current system

Journal

CLIMATE DYNAMICS
Volume 39, Issue 1-2, Pages 509-529

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-011-1170-6

Keywords

Regional modelling; South-East Pacific; Heat Balance; Oceanic eddies; Regional climate

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [N00014-08-1-0597]
  2. National Science Foundation [ATM-0747533]
  3. Directorate For Geosciences [0747533] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  4. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [0747533] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The Peru-Chile current System (PCS) is a region of persistent biases in global climate models. It has strong coastal upwelling, alongshore boundary currents, and mesoscale eddies. These oceanic phenomena provide essential heat transport to maintain a cool oceanic surface underneath the prevalent atmospheric stratus cloud deck, through a combination of mean circulation and eddy flux. We demonstrate these behaviors in a regional, quasi-equilibrium oceanic model that adequately resolves the mesoscale eddies with climatological forcing. The key result is that the atmospheric heating is large (> 50 W m(-2)) over a substantial strip > 500 km wide off the coast of Peru, and the balancing lateral oceanic flux is much larger than provided by the offshore Ekman flux alone. The atmospheric heating is weaker and the coastally influenced strip is narrower off Chile, but again the Ekman flux is not sufficient for heat balance. The eddy contribution to the oceanic flux is substantial. Analysis of eddy properties shows strong surface temperature fronts and associated large vorticity, especially off Peru. Cyclonic eddies moderately dominate the surface layer, and anticyclonic eddies, originating from the nearshore poleward Peru-Chile Undercurrent (PCUC), dominate the subsurface, especially off Chile. The sensitivity of the PCS heat balance to equatorial intra-seasonal oscillations is found to be small. We demonstrate that forcing the regional model with a representative, coarse-resolution global reanalysis wind product has dramatic and deleterious consequences for the oceanic circulation and climate heat balance, the eddy heat flux in particular.

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