Publication | Open Access
The Seasonality of Submesoscale Energy Production, Content, and Cascade
109
Citations
43
References
2020
Year
Ocean DynamicsEngineeringSubmesoscale Energy ProductionOceanographyEarth ScienceBuoyancy ProductionGeophysicsStrong VorticityMarine MeteorologyAtmospheric ScienceOceanic SystemsClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityMeteorologyOceanic ForcingClimate SystemClimate DynamicsClimatologyPhysical OceanographySpectral AnalysisOcean Physic
Abstract Submesoscale processes in the upper ocean vary seasonally, in tight correspondence with mixed layer thickness variability. Based on a global high‐resolution MITgcm simulation, seasonal evaluation of strong vorticity and spectral analysis of the kinetic energy in the Kuroshio Extension System show the strongest submesoscales occur in March, implying a lag of about a month behind mixed layer thickness maximum in February. An analysis of spectral energy sources and transfers indicates that the seasonality of the submesoscale energy content is a result of the competition between the conversion of available potential energy into submesoscale kinetic energy via a buoyancy production/vertical buoyancy flux associated with mixed layer instability and nonlinear energy transfers to other scales associated with an energy cascade. The buoyancy production is seasonally in phase with the mixed layer depth, but the transfers of energy across scales makes energizing the reservoir of submesoscale kinetic energy lag behind by a month.
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