Gayana (Jan 2004)

EDDY-INDUCED HEAT TRANSPORT IN THE SUBTROPICAL NORTH PACIFIC FROM ARGO, TMI AND ALTIMETRY MEASUREMENTS

  • Bo Qiu,
  • Shuiming Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. 2
pp. 499 – 501

Abstract

Read online

Basin-scale heat transport induced by mesoscale oceanic eddies is estimated by combining satellite-derived sea surface height and temperature data with Argo float temperature/salinity data. In the North Pacific subtropical gyre, warm (cold) temperature anomalies of mesoscale eddies are found to be consistently located to the west of high (low) SSH anomalies. The phase misalignment between the temperature and velocity anomalies, however, is largely confined to the seasonal thermocline, causing most of the eddy-induced heat transport to be carried in the surface 200 m layer. By establishing a statistical relationship between the surface and depth-integrated values of the eddy heat transport, the basin-scale eddy heat transport is derived from the concurrent satellite SSH/SST data of the past 6 yrs. In the Kuroshio Extension region, the meandering zonal jet is found to generate oppositely signed eddy heat fluxes. As a result,the zonally integrated poleward heat transport associated with the Kuroshio Extension is at a level of O (0.1 pW), smaller than the previous estimates based on turbulent closure schemes. Large poleward eddy heat transport is also found in the subtropical North Pacific along a SW-NE tilting band between Taiwan and theMidway Islands. This band corresponds to the region of the Subtropical Front and it is argued that the relevant temperature field for identifying this band in the turbulent closure scheme models should be that averaged over the seasonal thermocline