144 research outputs found
Wind and Gulf Stream Influences on Along-Shelf Transport and Off-Shelf Export at Cape Hatteras, North Carolina
Along-shelf transports across three cross-shelf lines on the continental shelf near Cape Hatteras have been calculated from moored current meter data over a continuous 24 month period in 1992-1994. The along-shelf convergence has been used to infer off-shelf export. Transport and transport convergence have been related to wind and Gulf Stream forcing and to variability in sea level at the coast. The along-shelf transport variability is primarily wind-driven and highly correlated with sea level fluctuations at the coast. Both winds and along-shelf transport exhibit a near-annual period variability. Along shelf transport is not well correlated with Gulf Stream offshore position. Along-shelf transport convergence is highly correlated with Gulf Stream position offshore, with a more shoreward Gulf Stream position leading increased along-shelf convergence by hours to a few days. Long-period variability of 14-16 months and 1-3 months is apparent in both Gulf Stream position and transport convergence. Variability in along-shelf convergence is poorly correlated with wind, wind convergence, or coastal sea level. A likely hypothesis accounting for the observed relationship between Gulf Stream position and along-shelf transport convergence is that the Gulf Stream is directly influencing cross-shelf export processes along the outer boundary of the study site. Despite predominantly convergent flow on the shelf at Cape Hatteras, brief periods of along-shelf divergence and shoreward cross-shelf transport exist (similar to 10% of the time just north of Cape Hatteras and similar to 34% of the time just south of Cape Hatteras during episodes of up to 3-8 days duration). Implied onshore flows of a few cm s-1 are tentatively identified in the moored current meter data for these periods. Satellite imagery for an extended along-shelf divergent period clearly suggests that shelf edge parcels could be advected a significant fraction of the way across the shelf
A Numerical Investigation of the Gulf Stream and Its Meanders in Response to Cold Air Outbreaks
The three-dimensional Princeton Ocean Model is used to examine the modification of the Gulf Stream and its meanders by cold air outbreaks. Two types of Gulf Stream meanders are found in the model. Meanders on the shoreward side of the Gulf Stream are baroclinically unstable. They are affected little by the atmospheric forcing because their energy source is stored at the permanent thermocline, well below the influence of the surface forcing. Meanders on the seaward side of the stream are both barotropically and baroclinically unstable. The energy feeding these meanders is stored at the surface front separating the Gulf Stream and the Sargasso Sea, which is greatly reduced in case of cold air outbreaks. Thus, meanders there reduce strength and also seem to slow their downstream propagation due to the southward Ekman flow. Heat budget calculations suggest two almost separable processes. The oceanic heat released to the atmosphere during these severe cooling episodes comes almost exclusively from the upper water column. Transport of heat by meanders from the Gulf Stream to the shelf, though it is large, does not disrupt the principal balance. It is balanced nicely with the net heat transport in the downstream direction
SUBSURFACE ENERGETICS OF THE GULF STREAM CYCLONIC FRONTAL ZONE OFF ONSLOW BAY, NORTH CAROLINA.
It is shown with the use of 4-month-long time series of velocity, temperature, and conductivity that fluctuating kinetic and potential energy was converted into kinetic and potential energy of the mean flow following a fluid particle in the subsurface Gulf Stream cyclonic frontal zone off Onslow Bay, North Carolina, during early 1979. This result agrees well with earlier measurements made in the surface layer off Onslow Bay. These flux calculations represent an important step in verifying the direction of the net cross-stream energy flux within the stream off Onslow Bay. According to an hypothesis presented for the growth and decay of Gulf Stream meanders along the continental margin of the southeastern United States, Onslow Bay is an area of decreasing meander amplitude. The direction of the energy conversion from meanders to the mean flow, determined from our calculations, is consistent with this hypothesis. Relatively low velocity covariances were found to be associated with relatively small transfers of kinetic energy during a period of low meander activity
FIELD PERFORMANCE TEST OF THE SIPPICAN DEEP AIRCRAFT-DEPLOYED EXPENDABLE BATHYTHERMOGRAPH.
A field test of the performance of the initial design, deep (760 m/2500 ft. ) Sippican aircraft-deployed expendable bathythermograph (AXBT) has been conducted. Thirty-seven AXBT's were deployed beside a research vessel, which was conducting conductivity, temperature, and depth (CTD) casts to 1000 m. A total of five CTD casts were made. A comparison between AXBT and CTD data showed that the AXBT's provided temperature profiles with accuracies that depended upon the particular formulae chosen for frequency-to-temperature conversion and fall rate
Coastally Trapped Wind Reversals: Progress toward Understanding
Coastally trapped wind reversals along the U.S. west coast, which are often accompanied by a northward surge of
fog or stratus, are an important warm-season forecast problem due to their impact on coastal maritime activities and
airport operations. Previous studies identified several possible dynamic mechanisms that could be responsible for producing
these events, yet observational and modeling limitations at the time left these competing interpretations open for
debate. In an effort to improve our physical understanding, and ultimately the prediction, of these events, the Office of
Naval Research sponsored an Accelerated Research Initiative in Coastal Meteorology during the years 1993â 98 to study
these and other related coastal meteorological phenomena. This effort included two field programs to study coastally
trapped disturbances as well as numerous modeling studies to explore key dynamic mechanisms. This paper describes
the various efforts that occurred under this program to provide an advancement in our understanding of these disturbances.
While not all issues have been solved, the synoptic and mesoscale aspects of these events are considerably better understood.Most of the authors were supported through the Office of Naval Research Coastal Meteorology Accelerated Research Initiative, one of the authors (WTT) was supported by Program Element 0601153N, Naval Research Laboratory
Overview of the Processes driving Exchange At Cape Hatteras Program
© The Author(s), 2022. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Seim, H., Savidge, D., Andres, M., Bane, J., Edwards, C., Gawarkiewicz, G., He, R., Todd, R., Muglia, M., Zambon, J., Han, L., & Mao, S. Overview of the Processes driving Exchange at Cape Hatteras Program. Oceanography, (2022),
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2022.205.The Processes driving Exchange At Cape Hatteras (PEACH) program seeks to better understand seawater exchanges between the continental shelf and the open ocean near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. This location is where the Gulf Stream transitions from a boundary-trapped current to a free jet, and where robust along-shelf convergence brings cool, relatively fresh Middle Atlantic Bight and warm, salty South Atlantic Bight shelf waters together, forming an important and dynamic biogeographic boundary. The magnitude of this convergence implies large export of shelf water to the open ocean here. Background on the oceanography of the region provides motivation for the study and gives context for the measurements that were made. Science questions focus on the roles that wind forcing, Gulf Stream forcing, and lateral density gradients play in driving exchange. PEACH observational efforts include a variety of fixed and mobile observing platforms, and PEACH modeling included two different resolutions and data assimilation schemes. Findings to date on mean circulation, the nature of export from the southern Middle Atlantic Bight shelf, Gulf Stream variability, and position variability of the Hatteras Front are summarized, together with a look ahead to forthcoming analyses.We gratefully acknowledge NSF funding (OCE-1558920 to UNC-CH, OCE-1559476 to SkIO, OCE-1558521 to WHOI, OCE-1559178 to NCSU); technical support from Sara Haines, Craig Marquette, Trip Patterson, Nick DeSimone, Erran Sousa, Gabe Matthias, Patrick Deane, Brian Hogue, Frank Bahr, and Ben Hefner; cruise participants Jacob Forsyth, Joleen Heiderich, Chuxuan Li, Marco Valero, Lauren Ball, John McCord, and Kyle Maddux-Lawrence; and the crew of R/V Armstrong for their able support during three PEACH cruises
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Atmospheric forcing of the Oregon coastal ocean during the 2001 upwelling season
Meteorological conditions during an intensive oceanographic observational program
in May through August 2001 along the central Oregon coast are described and related to
larger-scale and longer-term conditions. Southward wind stresses of 0.05-0.1 N m⁻²
occurred roughly 75% of the time, with a sustained period of dominantly southward stress
from mid-June through July. Wind variations were correlated with variations in the large-scale
Aleutian Low and North Pacific High pressure centers; correlations with the
continental Thermal Low were small. Intraseasonal oscillations in alongshore wind stress
(periods near 20 days) correlated with the north-south position of the jet stream. These
stress oscillations drove 20 day oscillations in upper ocean temperature, with a lag of
roughly 5 days for maximum correlation and amplitudes near 4°C. The sum of sensible
and latent air-sea heat fluxes was generally into the atmosphere through June, then weakly
into the ocean thereafter, with fluctuations on synoptic timescales. Semidiurnal
fluctuations in surface air temperature were observed at two northern moorings, apparently
forced indirectly by nonlinear internal ocean tides. The diurnal cycle of wind stress
was similar for both southward and northward wind conditions, with the diurnal
alongshore fluctuation southward in the evening and northward in the morning. During
southward winds the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) was typically defined
clearly by a strong temperature inversion, and a shallow stable internal boundary layer
often formed within the MABL over cool upwelled waters, with surface air temperature
roughly 1°C lower inshore than offshore. During northward winds, essentially no
low-level temperature stratification was observed.Keywords: coastal meteorology, air‐sea interactions, coastal upwellin
Coastal Ocean Processes : a science prospectus
CoOP (Coastal Ocean Processes) is an organization meant to study major interdisciplinary scientific
problems in the coastal ocean. Its goal is "to obtain a new level of quantitative understanding of the processes
that dominate the transformations, transport and fates of biologically, chemically and geologically important matter on the continental margin". Central to obtaining this understanding will be advances in observing and
modeling the cross-shelf component of transport. More specific objectives are to understand 1) cross-margin
exchanges, 2) air sea exchanges, 3) benthic-pelagic exchanges, 4) terrestrial inputs and 5) biological and
chemical transformations within the water column. CoOP research will be carried out primarly through a
series of process-oriented field studies, each involving about two years of measurements. Each of these field
studies is to be initiated and defined through a community workshop. In addition to the process studies, CoOP
will also involve modeling, long time series, exploratory studies, remote sensing, technological innovation, data
archiving and communications. A CoOP pilot study has been approved for funding by the National Science
Foundation, and funding will begin in 1992. The CoOP science effort is thus already underway.Funding was provided by the National Science Foundation under
Grant No. OCE-9108993
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Delayed upwelling alters nearshore coastal ocean ecosystems in the northern California current
Wind-driven coastal ocean upwelling supplies nutrients to the
euphotic zone near the coast. Nutrients fuel the growth of phytoplankton,
the base of a very productive coastal marine ecosystem
[Pauly D, Christensen V (1995) Nature 374:255–257]. Because
nutrient supply and phytoplankton biomass in shelf waters are
highly sensitive to variation in upwelling-driven circulation, shifts
in the timing and strength of upwelling may alter basic nutrient
and carbon fluxes through marine food webs. We show how a
1-month delay in the 2005 spring transition to upwelling-favorable
wind stress in the northern California Current Large Marine Ecosystem
resulted in numerous anomalies: warm water, low nutrient
levels, low primary productivity, and an unprecedented low recruitment
of rocky intertidal organisms. The delay was associated
with 20- to 40-day wind oscillations accompanying a southward
shift of the jet stream. Early in the upwelling season (May–July) off
Oregon, the cumulative upwelling-favorable wind stress was the
lowest in 20 years, nearshore surface waters averaged 2°C warmer
than normal, surf-zone chlorophyll-a and nutrients were 50% and
30% less than normal, respectively, and densities of recruits of
mussels and barnacles were reduced by 83% and 66%, respectively.
Delayed early-season upwelling and stronger late-season
upwelling are consistent with predictions of the influence of global
warming on coastal upwelling regions.Keywords: coastal ocean upwelling, coastal marine ecosystems, marine ecology, climate variabilit
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