Physical evolution of Tasman Sea Eddy J

1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 495 ◽  
Author(s):  
GR Cresswell

The evolution of warm-core eddy J was followed from March 1979 until May 1980. From March to October 1979, eddy J developed a deep surface mixed layer that, after summer capping, became a subsurface 'signature' for subsequent identification. During the first half of the observation period, eddy J was subjected to frequent peripheral injections of northern water, mainly from the East Australian Current but on one occasion from a northern eddy. Between mid-December 1979 and early February 1980, the signature layer of eddy J moved on top of the signature layer of another eddy. This is suggested to be an indication of the coalescence of the two eddies. The prehistory of eddy J was conjectured from the nature of a signature layer that the eddy already had in March 1979.

1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 687 ◽  
Author(s):  
PJ Mulhearn

The observed geographical distribution of warm-core rings is discussed in relation to the coverage of past research cruises. It is found that no rings, detached from the East Australian Current, have been found north of 33�S. and that there is a tendency for them to persist for some time to the south- east of Jervis Bay between 35 and 38�S. and 151 and 154�E. Surface mixed-layer temperatures are similar to monthly mean values over 10 years, being 0.35�C higher on average with a standard deviation of 1.0�C. Surface mixed-layer depths within rings are significantly greater than the average values found at 34�S. from February to September but are close to the average values in November and December.


1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 587 ◽  
Author(s):  
DJ Tranter ◽  
DJ Tafe ◽  
RL Sandland

Several eddies in the south-western Tasman Sea were investigated to see whether they differed faunistically from the seas around them. Zooplankton samples (0-200 m) were taken by free-fall net for dry weight measurements and copepod analyses. The counts obtained for 20 species of copepod were used to classify 51 stations into (eight) groups. These were taken to constitute the major zooplankton habitats in the study area. These habitats corresponded in most respects with the known physical structure of the study area. Eddies were faunistically distinct from the seas that surrounded them. Eddy J was similar in 1979-1980 to the waters of the East Australian Current, which were periodically entrained within the eddy circulation. There were significant faunal differences between eddy J and eddy F, an isolated eddy sampled in December 1978.


2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 429-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leif N. Thomas ◽  
Terrence M. Joyce

Abstract Sections of temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, and velocity were made crossing the Gulf Stream in late January 2006 to investigate the role of frontal processes in the formation of Eighteen Degree Water (EDW), the Subtropical Mode Water of the North Atlantic. The sections were nominally perpendicular to the stream and measured in a Lagrangian frame by following a floating spar buoy drifting in the Gulf Stream’s warm core. During the survey, EDW was isolated from the mixed layer by the stratified seasonal pycnocline, suggesting that EDW was not yet actively being formed at this time in the season and at the longitudes over which the survey was conducted (64°–70°W). However, in two of the sections, the seasonal pycnocline in the core of the Gulf Stream was broken by an intrusion of cold, fresh, weakly stratified water, nearly saturated in oxygen, that appears to have been subducted from the surface mixed layer north of the stream. The intrusion was identified in three of the sections in profiles with a nearly identical temperature–salinity relation. From the western-to-easternmost sections, where the intrusion was observed, the depth of the intrusion’s salinity minimum descended by ∼90 m in the 71 h it took to complete this part of the survey. This apparent subduction occurred primarily on the upstream side of a meander trough, where the cross-stream velocity was confluent and frontogenetic. Using a variant of the omega equation, the vertical velocity driven by the confluent flow was inferred and yielded downwelling in the vicinity of the intrusion spanning 10–40 m day−1, a range of values consistent with the intrusion’s observed descent, suggesting that frontal subduction was responsible for the formation of the intrusion. In the easternmost section located downstream of the meander trough, the flow was diffluent, driving an inferred vertical circulation that was of the opposite sense to that in the section upstream of the trough. In transiting the two sides of the trough, the intrusion was observed to move toward the center of the stream between the downwelling branches of the opposing vertical circulations, resulting in a downward Lagrangian mean vertical velocity and net subduction. Hydrographic evidence of the subduction of weakly stratified surface waters was seen in the southern flank of the Gulf Stream as well. The solution of the omega equation suggests that this subduction was associated with a relatively shallow vertical circulation confined to the upper 200 m of the water column in the proximity of the front marking the southern edge of the warm core.


1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 525 ◽  
Author(s):  
DJ Rochford

Comparison of the salinity within and around warm-core eddies of the western Tasman Sea has shown (a) that such eddies have their origin solely within waters of the East Australian Current (EAC); (b) that as these eddies drift southward within the EAC, their salinity characteristics differ little from those of the surrounding water; (c) that after separation from the EAC at around 34�S., their salinity characteristics are generally conserved in the face of much lower salinities of the surrounding waters. This latter feature was especially marked in the case of eddy J, which maintained in the upper 250 m an abnormally high salinity signature to as far south as 40� Below 300 m, this eddy J contained remnants of another high-salinity eddy. Possible derivations of these deeper waters are examined.


1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 681 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Airey

Warm-core eddies off the eastern coast of Australia are characterized by their isothermal core temperatures. For coastal eddies, core temperatures correlate with the latitude of the eddy at the end of winter. The isothermal temperature is used to identify and track eddies. Eddy positions from 1976 to 1981 have been charted to show patterns in their formation, drift and interactions with other eddies and the East Australian Current. To date, eddies have been named alphabetically in an ad hoc way that has caused confusion because of the unexpected behaviour of some eddies. To overcome this, a systematic way of naming eddies is suggested, which takes into account the eddy's history.


1994 ◽  
Vol 29 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 221-232
Author(s):  
M.J. McCormick

Abstract Four one-dimensional models which have been used to characterize surface mixed layer (ML) processes and the thermal structure are described. Although most any model can be calibrated to mimic surface water temperatures, it does not imply that the corresponding mixing processes are well described. Eddy diffusion or "K" models can exhibit this problem. If a ML model is to be useful for water quality applications, then it must be able to resolve storm events and, therefore, be able to simulate the ML depth, h, and its time rate of change, dh/dt. A general water quality model is derived from mass conservation principles to demonstrate how ML models can be used in a physically meaningful way to address water quality issues.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Yadidya ◽  
A. D. Rao ◽  
Sachiko Mohanty

AbstractThe changes in the physical properties of the ocean on a diurnal scale primarily occur in the surface mixed layer and the pycnocline. Price–Weller–Pinkel model, which modifies the surface mixed layer, and the internal wave model based on Garrett–Munk spectra that calculates the vertical displacements due to internal waves are coupled to simulate the diurnal variability in temperature and salinity, and thereby density profiles. The coupled model is used to simulate the hourly variations in density at RAMA buoy (15° N, 90° E), in the central Bay of Bengal, and at BD12 (10.5° N, 94° E), in the Andaman Sea. The simulations are validated with the in-situ observations from December 2013 to November 2014. The primary advantage of this model is that it could simulate spatial variability as well. An integrated model is also tested and validated by using the output of the 3D model to initialize the coupled model during January, April, July, and October. The 3D model can be used to initialize the coupled model at any given location within the model domain to simulate the diurnal variability of density. The simulations showed promising results which could be further used in simulating the acoustic fields and propagation losses which are crucial for Navy operations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Duerschlag ◽  
Wiebke Mohr ◽  
Timothy G. Ferdelman ◽  
Julie LaRoche ◽  
Dhwani Desai ◽  
...  

AbstractOligotrophic ocean gyre ecosystems may be expanding due to rising global temperatures [1–5]. Models predicting carbon flow through these changing ecosystems require accurate descriptions of phytoplankton communities and their metabolic activities [6]. We therefore measured distributions and activities of cyanobacteria and small photosynthetic eukaryotes throughout the euphotic zone on a zonal transect through the South Pacific Ocean, focusing on the ultraoligotrophic waters of the South Pacific Gyre (SPG). Bulk rates of CO2 fixation were low (0.1 µmol C l−1 d−1) but pervasive throughout both the surface mixed-layer (upper 150 m), as well as the deep chlorophyll a maximum of the core SPG. Chloroplast 16S rRNA metabarcoding, and single-cell 13CO2 uptake experiments demonstrated niche differentiation among the small eukaryotes and picocyanobacteria. Prochlorococcus abundances, activity, and growth were more closely associated with the rims of the gyre. Small, fast-growing, photosynthetic eukaryotes, likely related to the Pelagophyceae, characterized the deep chlorophyll a maximum. In contrast, a slower growing population of photosynthetic eukaryotes, likely comprised of Dictyochophyceae and Chrysophyceae, dominated the mixed layer that contributed 65–88% of the areal CO2 fixation within the core SPG. Small photosynthetic eukaryotes may thus play an underappreciated role in CO2 fixation in the surface mixed-layer waters of ultraoligotrophic ecosystems.


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