Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves

In the Gulf of Guinea, intraseasonal variability is large at the equator and along the coast. Current data on the continental slope near 7.5° S show very energetic biweekly oscillations at 1300 m depth. A high resolution primitive equation numerical model demonstrates that this deep vari...

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Main Authors: C. Guiavarc'h, A. M. Treguier, A. Vangriesheim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2009-05-01
Series:Ocean Science
Online Access:http://www.ocean-sci.net/5/141/2009/os-5-141-2009.pdf
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author C. Guiavarc'h
A. M. Treguier
A. Vangriesheim
author_facet C. Guiavarc'h
A. M. Treguier
A. Vangriesheim
author_sort C. Guiavarc'h
collection DOAJ
description In the Gulf of Guinea, intraseasonal variability is large at the equator and along the coast. Current data on the continental slope near 7.5° S show very energetic biweekly oscillations at 1300 m depth. A high resolution primitive equation numerical model demonstrates that this deep variability is forced by equatorial winds, through the generation of equatorial Yanai waves that propagate eastward and at depth, and then poleward as coastally-trapped waves upon reaching the coast of Africa. Intraseasonal variability is intensified along the coast of the Gulf of Guinea, especially in the 10–20 day period range and at depths between 500 and 1500 m. The kinetic energy distribution is well explained at first order by linear theory. Along the equator, eastward intensification of energy and bottom intensification are in qualitative agreement with vertically propagating Yanai waves, although the signal is influenced by the details of the bathymetry. Along the coast, baroclinic modes 3 to 5 are important close to the equator, and the signal is dominated by lower vertical modes farther south. Additional current meter data on the continental slope near 3° N display an energy profile in the 10–20 day period band that is strikingly different from the one at 7.5° S, with surface intensification rather than bottom intensification and a secondary maximum near 800 m. The model reproduces these features and explains them: the surface intensification in the north is due to the regional wind forcing, and the north-south asymmetry of the deep signal is due to the presence of the zonal African coast near 5° N. A 4 years time series of current measurements at 7.5° S shows that the biweekly oscillations are intermittent and vary from year to year. This intermittency is not well correlated with fluctuations of the equatorial winds and does not seem to be a simple linear response to the wind forcing.
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spelling doaj.art-209b971fbe2b4c4597b74867462e98ad2022-12-22T02:14:40ZengCopernicus PublicationsOcean Science1812-07841812-07922009-05-0152141153Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal wavesC. Guiavarc'hA. M. TreguierA. VangriesheimIn the Gulf of Guinea, intraseasonal variability is large at the equator and along the coast. Current data on the continental slope near 7.5° S show very energetic biweekly oscillations at 1300 m depth. A high resolution primitive equation numerical model demonstrates that this deep variability is forced by equatorial winds, through the generation of equatorial Yanai waves that propagate eastward and at depth, and then poleward as coastally-trapped waves upon reaching the coast of Africa. Intraseasonal variability is intensified along the coast of the Gulf of Guinea, especially in the 10–20 day period range and at depths between 500 and 1500 m. The kinetic energy distribution is well explained at first order by linear theory. Along the equator, eastward intensification of energy and bottom intensification are in qualitative agreement with vertically propagating Yanai waves, although the signal is influenced by the details of the bathymetry. Along the coast, baroclinic modes 3 to 5 are important close to the equator, and the signal is dominated by lower vertical modes farther south. Additional current meter data on the continental slope near 3° N display an energy profile in the 10–20 day period band that is strikingly different from the one at 7.5° S, with surface intensification rather than bottom intensification and a secondary maximum near 800 m. The model reproduces these features and explains them: the surface intensification in the north is due to the regional wind forcing, and the north-south asymmetry of the deep signal is due to the presence of the zonal African coast near 5° N. A 4 years time series of current measurements at 7.5° S shows that the biweekly oscillations are intermittent and vary from year to year. This intermittency is not well correlated with fluctuations of the equatorial winds and does not seem to be a simple linear response to the wind forcing.http://www.ocean-sci.net/5/141/2009/os-5-141-2009.pdf
spellingShingle C. Guiavarc'h
A. M. Treguier
A. Vangriesheim
Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves
Ocean Science
title Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves
title_full Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves
title_fullStr Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves
title_full_unstemmed Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves
title_short Deep currents in the Gulf of Guinea: along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves
title_sort deep currents in the gulf of guinea along slope propagation of intraseasonal waves
url http://www.ocean-sci.net/5/141/2009/os-5-141-2009.pdf
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