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Interannual-to-decadal Variation of Tropical-subtropical |
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Exchange in the Pacific Ocean: Boundary Versus Interior |
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Pathways |
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Tong Lee, Ichiro Fukumori, Dimitris Menemenlis, Lee-Lueng Fu |
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Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology |
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Tropical-subtropical exchange of water masses is considered |
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to be important to interannual-to-decadal variability in the |
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tropical Pacific. On average, the exchange is accomplished |
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by a shallow (< 400 m) meridional circulation which connects |
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the equatorial upwelling, poleward transport of surface |
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Ekman flow, and equatorward transport of pycnocline waters |
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originating from the subtropics. Pycnocline waters arrive |
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at the tropics via western-boundary and interior pathways. |
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It is well-established that, on average, the two pathways |
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re-enforces the net exchange. However, less is known about |
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their relative role on interannual-to-decadal time scales |
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and the underlying physical processes. In this study, we |
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address these issues using sea level measurements obtained |
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by the TOPEX/Poseidon satellite altimter and circulation |
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estimated by the Consortium for Estimating the Circulation |
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and Climate of the Ocean (ECCO; http://www.ecco-group.org). |
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Variation of pycnocline transport via the boundary is found |
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to be (1) anti-correlated to and (2) smaller in magnitude |
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than that of the interior. These features are attributed |
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to the combined effect of two different forcing mechanisms: |
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(1) the variation of local wind stress curl changes the |
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strength of horizontal circulation and results in variation |
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of boundary flow that is opposite in direction and |
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comparable in magnitude to that of interior flow; (2) the |
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variation of equatorial zonal wind stress which affects |
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the strength of meridional circulation with net pycnocline |
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flow opposing the surface Ekman flow. Due to the partial |
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compensation by boundary flow, the convergence of |
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pycnocline waters into the tropics is about 50% of that |
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inferred from interior pycnocline flow alone. The net |
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pycnocline transport reflects ENSO forcing on interannual |
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time scales. There is less equatorward intrusion of |
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pycnocline water in the 1990s than in the 1980s, |
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consistent with recent observation. In the North Pacific, |
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variability of interior pycnocline transport is larger |
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than that through the boundary. This is different from the |
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time mean where the interior transport is substantially |
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smaller than that through the boundary. |
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