2 research outputs found

    Kinematic studies of transport across an island wake, with application to the Canary islands

    Get PDF
    Transport from nutrient-rich coastal upwellings is a key factor influencing biological activity in surrounding waters and even in the open ocean. The rich upwelling in the North-Western African coast is known to interact strongly with the wake of the Canary islands, giving rise to filaments and other mesoscale structures of increased productivity. Motivated by this scenario, we introduce a simplified two-dimensional kinematic flow describing the wake of an island in a stream, and study the conditions under which there is a net transport of substances across the wake. For small vorticity values in the wake, it acts as a barrier, but there is a transition when increasing vorticity so that for values appropriate to the Canary area, it entrains fluid and enhances cross-wake transport.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figure

    Kinematic studies of transport across an island wake, with application to the Canary islands

    Get PDF
    ArXiv pre-print: http://arxiv.org/abs/nlin/0605051.-- Final full-text version of the paper available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0870.2006.00199.x.Transport from nutrient-rich coastal upwellings is a key factor influencing biological activity in surrounding waters and even in the open ocean. The rich upwelling in the North-Western African coast is known to interact strongly with the wake of the Canary islands, giving rise to filaments and other mesoscale structures of increased productivity. Motivated by this scenario, we introduce a simplified two-dimensional kinematic flow describing the wake of an island in a stream, and study the conditions under which there is a net transport of substances across the wake. For small vorticity values in the wake, it acts as a barrier, but there is a transition when increasing vorticity so that for values appropriate to the Canary area, it entrains fluid and enhances cross-wake transport.M.S. and U.F. would like to acknowledge the financial support by the DFG grant FE 359/7-1(2003). E.H-G. and C.L. acknowledge financial support from MEC (Spain) and FEDER through project CONOCE2 (FIS2004-00953). Both groups have benefited from a MEC-DAAD joint program. C.L. is a Ram贸n y Cajal fellow of the Spanish MEC
    corecore