Horizontal distribution of near-inertial waves in the western Gulf of Mexico: Eulerian vs Lagrangian.

Enric Pallas Sanz1, Paula GarcĂ­a-Carrillo1, Beatriz Ixetl Garcia Gomez1, Jonathan M Lilly2 and Paula Perez-Brunius3, (1)CICESE, Ensenada, Mexico, (2)Theiss Research, La Jolla, CA, United States, (3)Center for Scientific Research and Higher Education at Ensenada, Physical Oceanography, Ensenada, Mexico
Abstract:
The time-average horizontal distribution of the near-inertial waves (NIWs) on the western Gulf of Mexico (GoM) is investigated using horizontal velocity data obtained from Lagrangian trajectories of ~200 surface drifters drogued at ~50m and deployed between September 2008 and September 2012. Preliminary results suggest maximum time-averaged near-inertial circle radius of 2.6km located in the southern Campeche bay near [22N,95W]; implying an inertial velocity of about 0.14m/s. Similar conclusions are delineated using horizontal velocity data obtained from 21 moorings deployed in the western GoM during the same time period. Maximum near-inertial kinetic energy and clockwise spectral energy is found in the mooring LNK3500 located at 21.850N and 94.028W. Maximum inertial circles measured with mooring data, however, are of about 1.6km leading to inertial currents of 0.087m/s, approximately a 40% smaller. This discrepancy seems to be due to the different depth level of the measurements and the bandwidth used to extract the near-inertial oscillations from the total flow. The time-average horizontal distributions of wind work computed from Lagrangian and Eulerian data are compared and they are not consistent with the time-averaged NIW field. The differences are not well understood but we speculate they may be due to the different time scales of wind fluctuations in the northwestern GoM compared to those observed in the Bay of Campeche, together with the change of sign of the background vorticity in the region; being negative (anticyclonic) in the northern GoM and positive (cyclonic) in the Bay of Campeche.