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Laboratory experiments on the interaction of a buoyant coastal current with a canyon : application to the East Greenland Current
Authors
Allen
Bacon
+34 more
Bacon
BODC
Bormans
Castelao
Cavalieri
Cenedese
Cenedese
Centurioni
Chapman
Chapman
Cho
Claudia Cenedese
David A. Sutherland
Garrett
Griffiths
Hickey
Holliday
Jakobsen
Kawasaki
Klinck
Klinger
Klinger
Lentz
Lentz
Malmberg
Pickart
She
Sheremet
Sutherland
Whitehead
Wilkinson
Williams
Wolfe
Yankovsky
Publication date
1 December 2008
Publisher
'American Meteorological Society'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2009. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Physical Oceanography 39 (2009): 1258-1271, doi:10.1175/2008JPO4028.1.This paper presents a set of laboratory experiments focused on how a buoyant coastal current flowing over a sloping bottom interacts with a canyon and what controls the separation, if any, of the current from the upstream canyon bend. The results show that the separation of a buoyant coastal current depends on the current width W relative to the radius of curvature of the bathymetry ρc. The flow moved across the mouth of the canyon (i.e., separated) for W/ρc > 1, in agreement with previous results. The present study extends previous work by examining both slope-controlled and surface-trapped currents, and using a geometry specific to investigating buoyant current–canyon interaction. The authors find that, although bottom friction is important in setting the position of the buoyant front, the separation process driven by the inertia of the flow could overcome even the strongest bathymetric influence. Application of the laboratory results to the East Greenland Current (EGC), an Arctic-origin buoyant current that is observed to flow in two branches south of Denmark Strait, suggests that the path of the EGC is influenced by the large canyons cutting across the shelf, as the range of W/ρc in the ocean spans those observed in the laboratory. What causes the formation of a two-branched EGC structure downstream of the Kangerdlugssuaq Canyon (68°N, 32°W) is still unclear, but potential mechanisms are discussed.This work was partially funded by NSF Grant OCE-0450658. DS also received support from the Academic Programs Office of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, while CC had partial support from NSF OCE-0350891
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