EGU23-14823
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-14823
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

How subsurface and double-core anticyclones intensify the winter mixed layer deepening in the Mediterranean sea

Alexandre Barboni1,3, Solange Coadou-Chaventon2, Alexandre Stegner1, Briac Le Vu1, and Franck Dumas3
Alexandre Barboni et al.
  • 1Ecole Polytechnique, Laboratoir de Météorologie Dynamique, Palaiseau, France (alexandre.barboni@polytechnique.edu)
  • 2Département de Géosciences, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France
  • 3Service Hydrographique et Océanographique de la Marine, Brest, France

The mixed layer is the uppermost layer of the ocean, connecting the atmosphere to the subsurface ocean through atmospheric fluxes. It is subject to pronounced seasonal variations: it deepens in winter due to buoyancy loss and shallows in spring while heat flux increase and restratify the water column. A mixed layer depth (MLD) modulation over this seasonal cycle has been observed within mesoscale eddies. 

Taking advantage of the numerous Argo floats deployed and trapped within large Mediterranean anticyclones over the last decades, we reveal for the first time this modulation at a 10-day temporal scale and free of the smoothing effect of composite approaches. The analysis of 16 continuous MLD time series inside 13 long-lived anticyclones at a fine temporal scale brings to light the importance of the eddy preexisting vertical structure in setting the MLD modulation by mesoscale eddies. Extreme MLD anomalies of up to 330m are observed when the winter mixed layer connects with a preexisting subsurface anticyclonic core, greatly accelerating mixed layer deepening. The winter MLD sometimes does not achieve such connection but homogenizes another subsurface layer, then forming a multi-core anticyclone with spring restratification. A MLD restratification delay is always observed, reaching more than 2 months in 3 out the 16 MLD timeseries. The water column starts to restratify outside anticyclones while mixed layer keeps deepening and cooling at the eddy core for a longer time. 

These new elements provide direct observation of double-core anticyclone formation, which dominant formation mechanism was previously considred to be vertical alignement, and provides new keys for understanding anticyclone vertical structure evolution.

How to cite: Barboni, A., Coadou-Chaventon, S., Stegner, A., Le Vu, B., and Dumas, F.: How subsurface and double-core anticyclones intensify the winter mixed layer deepening in the Mediterranean sea, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-14823, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-14823, 2023.