Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of Mexico

Submesoscale circulations influence momentum, buoyancy and transport of biological tracers and pollutants within the upper turbulent layer. How much and how far into the water column this influence extends remain open questions in most of the global ocean. This work evaluates the behavior of neutral...

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Main Authors: Guangpeng Liu, Annalisa Bracco, Alexandra Sitar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.615066/full
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spelling doaj-3263dc2f65d14ee48c93ad5f1d7c5dfa2021-03-12T18:09:40ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452021-03-01810.3389/fmars.2021.615066615066Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of MexicoGuangpeng LiuAnnalisa BraccoAlexandra SitarSubmesoscale circulations influence momentum, buoyancy and transport of biological tracers and pollutants within the upper turbulent layer. How much and how far into the water column this influence extends remain open questions in most of the global ocean. This work evaluates the behavior of neutrally buoyant particles advected in simulations of the northern Gulf of Mexico by analyzing the trajectories of Lagrangian particles released multiple times at the ocean surface and below the mixed layer. The relative role of meso- and submesoscale dynamics is quantified by comparing results in submesoscale permitting and mesoscale resolving simulations. Submesoscale circulations are responsible for greater vertical transport across fixed depth ranges and also across the mixed layer, both into it and away from it, in all seasons. The significance of the submesoscale-induced transport, however, is far greater in winter. In this season, a kernel density estimation and a detailed vertical mixing analysis are performed. It is found that in the large mesoscale Loop Current eddy, upwelling into the mixed layer is the major contributor to the vertical fluxes, despite its clockwise circulation. This is opposite to the behavior simulated in the mesoscale resolving case. In the “submesoscale soup,” away from the large mesoscale structures such as the Loop Current and its detached eddies, upwelling into the mixed layer is distributed more uniformly than downwelling motions from the surface across the base of the mixed layer. Maps of vertical diffusivity indicate that there is an order of magnitude difference among simulations. In the submesoscale permitting case values are distributed around 10–3 m2 s–1 in the upper water column in winter, in agreement with recent indirect estimates off the Chilean coast. Diffusivities are greater in the eastern portion of the Gulf, where the submesoscale circulations are more intense due to sustained density gradients supplied by the warmer and saltier Loop Current.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.615066/fullsubmesoscaleGulf of Mexicovertical transportmixed layer mixingeddy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guangpeng Liu
Annalisa Bracco
Alexandra Sitar
spellingShingle Guangpeng Liu
Annalisa Bracco
Alexandra Sitar
Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of Mexico
Frontiers in Marine Science
submesoscale
Gulf of Mexico
vertical transport
mixed layer mixing
eddy
author_facet Guangpeng Liu
Annalisa Bracco
Alexandra Sitar
author_sort Guangpeng Liu
title Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of Mexico
title_short Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of Mexico
title_full Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of Mexico
title_fullStr Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Submesoscale Mixing Across the Mixed Layer in the Gulf of Mexico
title_sort submesoscale mixing across the mixed layer in the gulf of mexico
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Submesoscale circulations influence momentum, buoyancy and transport of biological tracers and pollutants within the upper turbulent layer. How much and how far into the water column this influence extends remain open questions in most of the global ocean. This work evaluates the behavior of neutrally buoyant particles advected in simulations of the northern Gulf of Mexico by analyzing the trajectories of Lagrangian particles released multiple times at the ocean surface and below the mixed layer. The relative role of meso- and submesoscale dynamics is quantified by comparing results in submesoscale permitting and mesoscale resolving simulations. Submesoscale circulations are responsible for greater vertical transport across fixed depth ranges and also across the mixed layer, both into it and away from it, in all seasons. The significance of the submesoscale-induced transport, however, is far greater in winter. In this season, a kernel density estimation and a detailed vertical mixing analysis are performed. It is found that in the large mesoscale Loop Current eddy, upwelling into the mixed layer is the major contributor to the vertical fluxes, despite its clockwise circulation. This is opposite to the behavior simulated in the mesoscale resolving case. In the “submesoscale soup,” away from the large mesoscale structures such as the Loop Current and its detached eddies, upwelling into the mixed layer is distributed more uniformly than downwelling motions from the surface across the base of the mixed layer. Maps of vertical diffusivity indicate that there is an order of magnitude difference among simulations. In the submesoscale permitting case values are distributed around 10–3 m2 s–1 in the upper water column in winter, in agreement with recent indirect estimates off the Chilean coast. Diffusivities are greater in the eastern portion of the Gulf, where the submesoscale circulations are more intense due to sustained density gradients supplied by the warmer and saltier Loop Current.
topic submesoscale
Gulf of Mexico
vertical transport
mixed layer mixing
eddy
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.615066/full
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