On the Vertical Velocity and Nutrient Delivery in Warm Core Rings

Author:

Chen Ke1,Gaube Peter2,Pallàs-Sanz Enric3

Affiliation:

1. Physical Oceanography Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts

2. Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

3. Department of Physical Oceanography, Ensenada Center for Scientific Research and Higher Education, Ensenada, Mexico

Abstract

AbstractWe examine various contributions to the vertical velocity field within large mesoscale eddies by analyzing multiple solutions to an idealized numerical model of a representative anticyclonic warm core Gulf Stream ring. Initial conditions are constructed to reproduce the observed density and nutrient profiles collected during the Warm Core Rings Program. The contributions to vertical fluxes diagnosed from the numerical simulations are compared against a divergence-based, semidiagnostic equation and a generalized omega equation to better understand the dynamics of the vertical velocity field. Frictional decay alone is found to be ineffective in raising isopycnals and transporting nutrients to the upper ocean. With representative wind forcing, the magnitude of vorticity gradient–induced Ekman pumping is not necessarily larger than the current-induced counterpart on a time scale relevant to ecosystem response. Under realistic forcing conditions, strain deformation can perturb the ring to be noncircular and induce vertical velocities much larger than the Ekman vertical velocities. Nutrient budget diagnosis, together with analysis of the relative magnitudes of the various types of vertical fluxes, allows us to describe the time-scale dependence of nutrient delivery. At time scales that are relevant to individual phytoplankton (from hours to days), the magnitudes of nutrient flux by Ekman velocities and deformation-induced velocities are comparable. Over the life span of a typical warm core ring, which can span multiple seasons, surface current–induced Ekman pumping is the most effective mechanism in upper-ocean nutrient enrichment because of its persistence in the center of anticyclones regardless of the direction of the wind forcing.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Oceanography

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