Physics
Scientific paper
Dec 2008
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2008agufmos43e..05m&link_type=abstract
American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2008, abstract #OS43E-05
Physics
4500 Oceanography: Physical
Scientific paper
The interpretation of surface altimetric signals in terms of Rossby waves is revisited. Rather than make the long-wave approximation, the horizontal scale of the waves is adjusted to optimally fit the phase speed predicted by linear theory to that observed by altimetry, assuming a first baroclinic mode vertical structure. It is found that in the tropical band, the observations can be fit if the wavelength of the waves is assumed to be large, of order 600 km or so. However polewards of ±30degree it is more difficult to fit linear theory to the observations: the required scale of the waves must be reduced to about 100 km, somewhat larger than the local deformation wavelength. It is argued that these results can be interpreted in terms of Rossby wave, baroclinic instability and turbulence theory. At low latitudes there is an overlap between geostrophic turbulence and Rossby wave time scales and so an upscale energy transfer from baroclinic instability at the deformation scale can produce waves. At high latitudes there is no such overlap and waves are not produced by upscale energy transfer. These ideas are tested by using surface drifter data to infer turbulent velocities and timescales which are compared to those of linear Rossby waves. A transition from a field dominated by waves to one dominated by turbulence occurs at about ±30degrees, broadly consistent with the transition that is required to fit linear theory to altimetric observations.
Marshall James J.
Smith Sheila
Tulloch Ross
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