Volumes and Issues  Contents of Issue 1  
Ocean Sci. Discuss., 6, 871-908, 2009
www.ocean-sci-discuss.net/6/871/2009/
doi:10.5194/osd-6-871-2009
© Author(s) 2009. This work is distributed
under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.


Adjustment of the basin-scale circulation at 26° N to variations in Gulf Stream, deep western boundary current and Ekman transports as observed by the Rapid array

H. L. Bryden1, A. Mujahid1,2, S. A. Cunningham1, and T. Kanzow1,3
1National Oceanography Centre, Empress Dock, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK
2Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, 94300 Kota Samarahan, Sarawak, Malaysia
3Leibniz-Institut für Meereswisschenschaften, Düsternbrooker Weg 20, 24105 Kiel, Germany

Abstract. The Rapid instrument array across the Atlantic Ocean along 26° N provides unprecedented monitoring of the basin-scale circulation. A unique feature of the Rapid array is the combination of full-depth moorings with instruments measuring temperature, salinity, pressure time series at many depths with co-located bottom pressure measurements so that dynamic pressure can be measured from surface to bottom. Bottom pressure measurements show a zonally uniform rise (and fall) of bottom pressure of 0.015 dbar on a 5 to 10 day time scale, suggesting that the Atlantic basin is filling and draining on a short time scale. After removing the zonally uniform bottom pressure fluctuations, bottom pressure variations at 4000 m depth against the western boundary compensate instantaneously for baroclinic fluctuations in the strength and structure of the deep western boundary current so there is no basin-scale mass imbalance resulting from variations in the deep western boundary current. After removing the mass compensating bottom pressure, residual bottom pressure fluctuations at the western boundary just east of the Bahamas balance variations in Gulf Stream transport. Again the compensation appears to be especially confined close to the western boundary. Thus, fluctuations in either Gulf Stream or deep western boundary current transports are compensated in a depth independent (barotropic) manner very close to the continental slope off the Bahamas. In contrast, compensation for variations in wind-driven surface Ekman transport appears to involve fluctuations in both western basin and eastern basin bottom pressures, though the bottom pressure difference fluctuations appear to be a factor of 3 too large, perhaps due to an inability to resolve small bottom pressure fluctuations after removal of larger zonal average, baroclinic, and Gulf Stream pressure components. For 4 tall moorings where time series dynamic height (geostrophic pressure) profiles can be estimated from sea surface to ocean bottom and bottom pressure can be added, there is no general correlation between surface dynamic height and bottom pressure.

Discussion Paper (PDF, 6664 KB)   Interactive Discussion (Closed, 3 Comments)   Final Revised Paper (OS)   

Citation: Bryden, H. L., Mujahid, A., Cunningham, S. A., and Kanzow, T.: Adjustment of the basin-scale circulation at 26° N to variations in Gulf Stream, deep western boundary current and Ekman transports as observed by the Rapid array, Ocean Sci. Discuss., 6, 871-908, doi:10.5194/osd-6-871-2009, 2009.   Bibtex   EndNote   Reference Manager    XML
 

Recent Papers