Publication | Closed Access
Turbulent Jets and Eddies in the California Current and Inferred Cross-Shore Transports
189
Citations
4
References
1984
Year
Coastal EngineeringEngineeringScalar TransportOceanographyCoastal ProcessCurrent FilamentsGeophysical FlowEarth ScienceGeophysicsInstantaneous California CurrentNearshore ProcessCalifornia Current RegionAtmospheric ScienceCalifornia CurrentMeteorologyMarine GeologyGeographyTurbulent JetsSediment TransportClimatologyOcean EngineeringAerospace EngineeringPhysical OceanographyTurbulence ModelingInferred Cross-shore Transports
The instantaneous California Current is seen to consist of intense meandering current filaments (jets) intermingled with synoptic-mesoscale eddies. These quasi-geostrophic jets entrain cold, upwelled coastal waters and rapidly advect them far offshore; this behavior accounts for the elongated, cool surface features that are seen extending across the California Current region in satellite infrared imagery. The associated advective mechanism should provide significant cross-shore transports of heat, nutrients, biota, and pollutants. The dynamics of the current system should be crucially influenced by its highly variable structure.
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