Inferring Upper Ocean Dynamics from Horizontal Wavenumber Spectra in the Southern California Current System
Teresa K Chereskin1, Sarah T Gille1, Cesar B Rocha1 and Dimitris Menemenlis2, (1)Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, CA, United States, (2)Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA, United States
Abstract:
At the largest horizontal scales (> 100 km), the surface kinetic energy of the ocean appears dominated by a regime of balanced geostrophic motions. At the smallest scales, it transitions to a regime where unbalanced motions (such as internal waves, mixed-layer instabilities, etc.) dominate the surface kinetic energy. The length scale at which the transition occurs depends on the relative energies of balanced and unbalanced motions, which in turn display significant geographic variability. Wavenumber spectra in the upper ocean have been hypothesized to have slopes consistent with either quasi-geostrophic (QG) or surface quasi-geostrophic (SQG) theory. In previous analyses of repeat-track shipboard acoustic Doppler Current profiler (ADCP) velocity observations in the Gulf Stream and the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, spectral slopes were more consistent with QG than SQG theory for length scales between 40 km and 200 km. For scales less than 40 km, the spectra deviated from both QG and SQG theory, and this was attributed in part to internal wave effects. A spectral Helmholtz decomposition was used to split the kinetic energy spectra into rotational and divergent components, identified with balanced and ageostrophic motions, respectively.
The California Current System (CCS) provides a contrasting environment characterized by a weak mean flow and an energetic meso- and submeso- scale. It is a nonlinear regime where the amplitude of eddies can be as large as the total steric height increase across the California Current, and hence southward flow in the CCS can, and often is, disrupted by its eddies. This study uses 10 years of shipboard ADCP observations collected on the quarterly cruises of the California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations. Horizontal wavenumber spectra from 36 cruises along 6 repeated tracks in the southern CCS that extend from the coast to the subtropical gyre are used to diagnose the dominant governing dynamics at meso- to submeso- scales (10-200 km), with particular attention to the partition into balanced and ageostrophic flows.