Spatial Variability of Movement, Structure, and Formation of Warm Core Rings in the Northwest Atlantic Slope Sea

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS(2022)

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摘要
Gulf Stream Warm Core Rings (WCRs) have important influences on the New England Shelf and marine ecosystems. A 10-year (2011-2020) WCR dataset that tracks weekly WCR locations and surface areas is used here to identify the rings' path and characterize their movement between 55 and 75 degrees W. The WCR dataset reveals a very narrow band between 66 and 71 degrees W along which rings travel almost due west along similar to 39 degrees N across isobaths - the "Ring Corridor." Then, west of the corridor, the mean path turns southwestward, paralleling the shelfbreak. The average ring translation speed along the mean path is 5.9 cm s(-1). Long-lived rings (lifespan >150 days) tend to occupy the region west of the New England Seamount Chain (NESC) whereas short-lived rings (lifespan <150 days) tend to be more broadly distributed. WCR vertical structures, analyzed using available Argo float profiles indicate that rings that are formed to the west of the NESC have shallower thermoclines than those formed to the east. This tendency may be due to different WCR formation processes that are observed to occur along different sections of the Gulf Stream. WCRs formed to the east of the NESC tend to form from a pinch-off mechanism incorporating cores of Sargasso Sea water and a perimeter of Gulf Stream water. WCRs that form to the west of the NESC, form from a process called an aneurysm. WCRs formed through aneurysms comprise water mostly from the northern half of the Gulf Stream and are smaller than the classic pinch-off rings.
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关键词
Gulf Stream, warm core rings, trajectories, eddies, aneurysm, ring formation
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