85 research outputs found

    Wind-driven zonal jets in the South Pacific Ocean

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    International audienceZonal jets west of the large islands of the South Pacific Ocean are predicted by theory, commonly seen in ocean models with sufficiently high resolution, and are beginning to be observed. These jets are often taken to reflect the blocking effect of the islands in the South Equatorial Current through ''Island Rule'' dynamics. Here it is shown that quasi-permanent structures of the basinwide wind field imply the existence of jets formed independently of the islands. Evidence for the existence of the wind-driven jets is found in climatological geostrophic currents. The hydrographic structures that produce the jets occur well below the thermocline

    Estimating mean dynamic topography in the tropical Pacific Ocean from gravity and altimetry satellites

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    SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-24105 Kiel W 1190 (59) / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekDEGerman

    Thermocline Circulation in the Solomon Sea: A Modeling Study

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    International audienceIn the southwest Pacific, thermocline waters connecting the tropics to the equator via western boundary currents (WBCs) transit through the Solomon Sea. Despite its importance in feeding the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC) and its related potential influence on the low-frequency modulation of ENSO, the circulation inside the Solomon Sea is poorly documented. A model has been implemented to analyze the mean and the seasonal variability of the Solomon Sea thermocline circulation. The circulation involves an inflow from the open southern Solomon Sea, which is distributed via WBCs between the three north exiting straits of the semiclosed Solomon Sea. The system of WBCs is found to be complex. Its main feature, the New Guinea Coastal Undercurrent, splits in two branches: one flowing through Vitiaz Strait and the other one, the New Britain Coastal Undercurrent (NBCU), exiting at Solomon Strait. East of the Solomon Sea, the encounter of the South Equatorial Current (SEC) with the Solomon Islands forms a previously unknown current, which the authors call the Solomon Islands Coastal Undercurrent (SICU). The NBCU, SEC, and SICU participate in the feeding of the New Ireland Coastal Undercurrent (NICU), which retroflects to the Equatorial Undercurrent, providing the most direct western boundary EUC connection, which is particularly active in June-August. The Solomon Sea WBC seasonal variability results from the combination of equatorial dynamics, remotely forced Rossby waves north of 10°S, and the spinup and spindown of the subtropical gyre as a response of Rossby waves forced south of 10°S

    A comparison of coincidental time series of the ocean surface height by satellite altimeter, mooring, and inverted echo sounder

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    Altimetric measurements of sea surface height at two locations in the western tropical Pacific Ocean are compared to estimates of the dynamic sea surface height computed from cotemporal surface-to-bottom temperature/salinity measurements on moorings and acoustic travel time measured by bottom-moored inverted echo sounders. The results show statistically high correlation between the in situ measurements at periods greater than 5 days and between the altimeter and in situ measurements at periods greater than 20 days. The rms difference between any two modes of observation is consistently between 2 and 3 cm. (Résumé d'auteur

    Comparative assimilation of Topex/poseidon and ERS altimetric data and of TAO temperature data in the tropical Pacific Ocean during 1994-1998, and the mean sea-surface height issue

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    International audienceFive years of Topex/Poseidon (T/P) and ERS sea level anomaly (SLA) data (1994–1998) are assimilated every 10 days into a primitive equation model of the tropical Pacific ocean. The data assimilation technique used here is a reduced-order Kalman filter derived from the Singular Evolutive Extended Kalman (SEEK) filter [J. Mar. Syst. 16(3–4) (1998) 323] with an error covariance matrix parameterised by a subset of multivariate 3D global empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs). The assimilation run is compared to the free run and to independent data from the TAO network. The impact of sea-surface height (SSH) assimilation on surface and subsurface temperature and currents is estimated in the equatorial band. In a second stage, temperature data from the TAO array are assimilated in the same conditions as in the first stage. The comparison between the results of the two assimilation experiments is made mainly with a view to gaining insights into the mean sea-surface height (MSSH) for the assimilation of altimeter data, and more generally, into the question of biases. XBT observations and TAO array data are then used to build a physically more consistent mean sea-surface height for assimilation of SLA data. Results from the assimilation of altimeter data referenced to this new MSSH show significant improvements
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