23 research outputs found

    Drifter observations reveal intense vertical velocity in a surface ocean front

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    © The Author(s), 2022. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Tarry, D., Ruiz, S., Johnston, T., Poulain, P., Özgökmen, T., Centurioni, L., Berta, M., Esposito, G., Farrar, J., Mahadevan, A., & Pascual, A. Drifter observations reveal intense vertical velocity in a surface ocean front. Geophysical Research Letters, 49(18), (2022): e2022GL098969, https://doi.org/10.1029/2022gl098969.Measuring vertical motions represent a challenge as they are typically 3–4 orders of magnitude smaller than the horizontal velocities. Here, we show that surface vertical velocities are intensified at submesoscales and are dominated by high frequency variability. We use drifter observations to calculate divergence and vertical velocities in the upper 15 m of the water column at two different horizontal scales. The drifters, deployed at the edge of a mesoscale eddy in the Alboran Sea, show an area of strong convergence (urn:x-wiley:00948276:media:grl64766:grl64766-math-0001(f)) associated with vertical velocities of −100 m day−1. This study shows that a multilayered-drifter array can be an effective tool for estimating vertical velocity near the ocean surface.This research was supported by the Office of Naval Research (ONR) Departmental Research Initiative CALYPSO under program officers Terri Paluszkiewicz and Scott Harper. The authors' ONR Grant No. are as follows: DT, SR, AM, and AP N000141613130, TMSJ N000146101612470, PP N000141812418, TO N000141812138, LRC N000141712517, and N00014191269, MB and GE N000141812782 and N000141812039, and JTF N000141812431

    CALYPSO 2019 Cruise Report: field campaign in the Mediterranean

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    This cruise aimed to identify transport pathways from the surface into the interior ocean during the late winter in the Alborán sea between the Strait of Gibraltar (5°40’W) and the prime meridian. Theory and previous observations indicated that these pathways likely originated at strong fronts, such as the one that separates salty Mediterranean water and the fresher water in owing from the Atlantic. Our goal was to map such pathways and quantify their transport. Since the outcropping isopycnals at the front extend to the deepest depths during the late winter, we planned the cruise at the end of the Spring, prior to the onset of thermal stratification of the surface mixed layer.Funding was provided by the Office of Naval Research under Contract No. N000141613130

    Frontal convergence and vertical velocity measured by drifters in the Alboran Sea

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    Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2021. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans 126(4), (2021): e2020JC016614, https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JC016614.Horizontal and vertical motions associated with mesoscale (10–100 km) and submesoscale (1–10 km) features, such as fronts, meanders, eddies, and filaments, play a critical role in redistributing physical and biogeochemical properties in the ocean. This study makes use of a multiplatform data set of 82 drifters, a Lagrangian float, and profile timeseries of temperature and salinity, obtained in a ∼1-m/s semipermanent frontal jet in the Alboran Sea as part of CALYPSO (Coherent Lagrangian Pathways from the Surface Ocean to Interior). Drifters drogued at ∼1-m and 15-m depth capture the mesoscale and submesoscale circulation aligning along the perimeter of fronts due to horizontal shear. Clusters of drifters are used to estimate the kinematic properties, such as vorticity and divergence, of the flow by fitting a bivariate plane to the horizontal drifter velocities. Clusters with submesoscale length scales indicate normalized vorticity ζ/f > 1 with Coriolis frequency f and normalized divergence of (1) occurring in patches along the front, with error variance around 10%. By computing divergence from drifter clusters at two different depths, we estimate minimum vertical velocity of (−100 m day−1) in the upper 10 m of the water column. These results are at least twice as large as previous estimates of vertical velocity in the region. Location, magnitude, and timing of the convergence are consistent with behavior of a Lagrangian float subducting in the center of a drifter cluster. These results improve our understanding of frontal subduction and quantify convergence and vertical velocity using Lagrangian tools.This research was supported by the Office of Naval Research (ONR) Departmental Research Initiative CALYPSO under program officers Terri Paluszkiewicz and Scott Harper. The authors' ONR grant numbers are as follows: D. R. Tarry, A. Pascual, S. Ruiz and A. Mahadevan N000141613130, S. Essink N000146101612470, P.-M. Poulain N000141812418, T. OÖzgökmen N000141812138, L. R. Centurioni N000141712517 and N00014191269, T. Farrar N000141812431, A. Shcherbina N000141812139 and N000141812420, and E. A. D'Asaro N000141812139

    On the structure and kinematics of an Algerian Eddy in the southwestern Mediterranean sea

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    This article belongs to the Special Issue Observing the Flow of Ocean Currents and Circulation Using Remote Sensing.An Algerian Eddy, anticyclonic vortex generated by the instability of the Algerian Current in the southwestern Mediterranean Sea, is studied using data provided by drifters (surface currents), Argo floats (temperature and salinity profiles), environmental satellites (absolute dynamic topography maps and ocean color images) and operational oceanography products. The eddy was generated in May 2018 and lasted as an isolated vortex until November 2018. Its morphology and kinematics are described in June–July 2018 when drifters were trapped in its core. During that period, the eddy was slowly moving to the NE (~2 km/day), with an overall diameter of about 200 km (slowly growing with time) and maximal surface swirl velocity of ~50 cm/s at a radius of ~50 km. Geostrophic currents derived from satellite altimetry data compare well with low-pass filtered drifter velocities, with only a slight overestimation, which is expected as its maximum vorticity corresponds to a small Rossby number of ~0.6. Satellite ocean color images and some drifters show that the eddy has an elliptical spiral structure. The looping tracks of the drifters trapped in the eddy were analyzed using two statistical methods: least-squares ellipse fitting and wavelet ridge analysis, revealing a typical eccentricity of about 0.5, a wide range of inclination and a rotation period between 3 and 10 days. Clusters of drifters on the northeastern limb of the eddy were also considered to estimate divergence and vorticity. The results indicate convergence (divergence) and downwelling (upwelling) at scales of 20–50 km near the northeastern (northwestern) edge of the eddy, in agreement with the quasi-geostrophic theory. Vertically, the eddy extends mostly down to 250 m depth, with a warm, low-salinity and low-density signature and with geostrophic currents near 50 cm/s in the top layer (down to ~80 m) reducing to less than 10 cm/s near 250 m. Near the surface, colder water is advected into it.This research was mainly funded by the US Office of Naval Research (ONR) as part of the CALYPSO Departmental Research Initiative through grants N00014-18-1-2418 and N00014-18-1-2138. LC and the SVP drifters were funded by ONR grants N00014-17-1-2517 and N00014-19-1-269. D.T., A.P. and S.R. were funded by ONR grant N00014-16-1-3130.Peer reviewe

    Dataset to accompany the manuscript Drifter observations reveal intense vertical velocity in a surface ocean front

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    The dataset contains data from the following platforms: Drifters; Underway-CTD. -- Differences between files: SURFACE: contains the data from CARTHE drifters 15m: contains the data from SVP drifters.This dataset has been used in the publication "Drifter observations reveal intense vertical velocity in a surface ocean front".drifters_CALYPSO2019_15m_nofilt_cluster2.csvdrifters_CALYPSO2019_SURFACE_nofilt_cluster2.csvuctd_calypso2019_cluster2.ncPeer reviewe

    Kinematic Properties in the Alboran Sea: Results from Surface and Subsurface Drifter Observations

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    Trabajo presentado en la Ocean Sciences Meeting, celebrada en San Diego del 16 al 21 de febrero de 2020.Tracing the three-dimensional pathways of water parcels and particles in the upper ocean is of importance from many perspectives. Observation, understanding and prediction of the three-dimensional pathways by which water from the surface ocean makes its way into the deeper ocean is the goal of this research. During May of 2018 a pilot cruise in the framework of the CALYPSO ONR Departmental Research Initiative took place on the Alboran Sea in the Western Mediterranean Sea. This region is characterized by a strong semi-permanent front between the fresher Atlantic water that enters the Western Mediterranean at Gibraltar, and the more saline Mediterranean waters. It is populated by organized, time evolving features (jets, fronts, and gyres) that provide an ideal test bed for a dynamical systems-based Lagrangian analysis. During this cruise nearly a hundred drifters were deployed (between SVP, CODE and CARTHE drifters). In this work we use a least square method to calculate the differential kinematic properties of flow, divergence, vorticity and lateral strain from a set of drifters. These values are obtained through the study of the evolution in time of a patch formed by a cluster of drifters. Results from drifters at different depths, surface and 15m, show different dynamics in these layers
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