Determining the dependence of the power supply to the ocean on the length and time scales of the dynamics between the meso-scale and the synoptic-scale, from satellite data
- CNRS, LEGI UMR 5519, Grenoble cedex 9, France (achim.wirth@legi.cnrs.fr)
The input of mechanical power to the ocean due to the surface wind-stress, in regions which correspond to different regimes of ocean dynamics, is considered using data from satellites observations. Its dependence on the coarse-graining range of the atmospheric and oceanic velocity in space from 0.5° to 10° and time from 6h to 40 days is determined.
In the area of the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio extensions the dependence of the power-input on space-time coarse-graining varies over tenfold for the coarse-graining considered. It decreases over twofold for the Gulf Stream extension and threefold for the Kuroshio extension, when the coarse-graining length-scale passes from a few degrees to 0.5° at a temporal coarse-graining scale of a few days. It increases over threefold in the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio extensions when the coarse-graining passes from several days to 6h at a spatial coarse-graining of a few degrees. The power input is found to increase monotonically with shorter coarse-graining in time. Its variation with coarse-graining in space has no definite sign. Results show that including the dynamics at scales below a few degrees reduces considerably the power input by air-sea interaction in regions ofstrongly non-linear ocean currents. When the ocean velocities are not considered in the shear calculation the power-input is considerably (up to threefold) increased. The dependence of the power input on coarse-graining in space and time is close to being multiplicatively separable in all regions and for most of the coarse-graining domain considered.
How to cite: Wirth, A.: Determining the dependence of the power supply to the ocean on the length and time scales of the dynamics between the meso-scale and the synoptic-scale, from satellite data, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-695, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-695, 2022.