Abstract
About 350 instrumented moorings have been set during the past decade to develop and exploit a technique of ocean-current measurement. Nearly all the records are characterized by intermittent oscillatory motions with random changes of amplitude and phase near the local inertial frequency and at the semidiurnal tidal frequency. Local generation of inertial currents by winds has been observed in the surface mixed layer. Above tidal frequencies the motion is irregular and nearly isotropic horizontally. The kinetic energy density decreases with frequency and depth, with considerable day-to-day fluctuations. At a given depth, the kinetic energy is remarkably constant when averaged over a month or longer, and varies only within a narrow range over a large extent of the Atlantic Ocean. Below inertial frequencies, the kinetic energy density increases with decreasing frequency. The motions have stronger vertical coherence and larger horizontal scale. Deep currents are dominated by the meandering of the Gulf Stream. Speeds up to one knot (0.5ms-1) are found near the bottom under the Stream. North of the Gulf Stream, a 3-year average from intermittent records indicates a westward flow, approximately parallel to the continental shelf and bottom topography.
Reference20 articles.
1. (Fofonoff & Webster)
2. Design of deep-sea mooring lines;Berteaux H. O.;Mar. Tech. Soc. J.,1970
3. Oscillation modes of a deep-sea mooring;Fofonoff N. P.;Geo-Marine Tech.,1966
4. Fofonoff N. P. 1968 Current measurements from moored buoys 1959-1965. Woods Hole Oceanogr. Inst. Ref. 68-30 (unpublished manuscript).
5. Fofonoff N. P. 1969 Spectral characteristics of internal waves in the ocean. Deep Sea Res. (Suppl. to 16) 59-71.
Cited by
33 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献