Abstract
Abstract. Mesoscale ocean processes are prevalent in many parts of the global oceans
and may contribute substantially to the meridional movement of heat. Yet
earlier global surveys of meridional temperature fluxes and heat transport
(HT) have not formally distinguished between mesoscale and large-scale
contributions, or they have defined eddy contributions based on temporal rather
than spatial characteristics. This work uses spatial filtering methods to
separate large-scale (gyre and planetary wave) contributions from mesoscale
(eddy, recirculation, and tropical instability wave) contributions to
meridional HT. Overall, the mesoscale temperature flux (MTF) produces a net
poleward meridional HT at midlatitudes and equatorward meridional HT in the
tropics, thereby resulting in a net divergence of heat from the subtropics.
In addition to MTF generated by propagating eddies and tropical instability
waves, MTF is also produced by stationary recirculations near energetic
western boundary currents, where the temperature difference between the
boundary current and its recirculation produces the MTF. The mesoscale
contribution to meridional HT yields substantially different results from
temporally based “eddy” contributions to meridional HT, with the latter
including large-scale gyre and planetary wave motions at low latitudes.
Mesoscale temperature fluxes contribute the most to interannual and decadal
variability of meridional HT in the Southern Ocean, the tropical Indo-Pacific,
and the North Atlantic. Surface eddy kinetic energy (EKE) is not a good
proxy for MTF variability in regions with the highest time-mean EKE, though it
does explain much of the temperature flux variability in regions of modest
time-mean EKE. This approach to quantifying mesoscale fluxes can be used to
improve parameterizations of mesoscale effects in coarse-resolution models
and assess regional impacts of mesoscale eddies and recirculations on tracer
fluxes.
Funder
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy
Cited by
5 articles.
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