Interaction of an Upwelling Front with External Vortices: Impact on Cross-shore Particle Exchange
2021, Volume 26, Number 5, pp. 543-561
Author(s): de Marez C., Carton X.
Author(s): de Marez C., Carton X.
Coastal upwellings, due to offshore Ekman transport, are more energetic at
the western boundaries of the oceans, where they are intensified by incoming
Rossby waves, than at the eastern boundaries. Western boundary upwellings
are often accompanied by a local vortex field. The instability of a developed
upwelling front and its interaction with an external vortex field is studied
here with a three-dimensional numerical model of the hydrostatic rotating Navier-Stokes
equations (the primitive equations). The baroclinic instability of the front
leads to the growth of meanders with 100-200 km wavelength, in the absence of
external vortex. On the $f$-plane, these waves can break into a row of vortices
when the instability is intense. The $\beta$-effect is stabilizing and strongly
decreases the amplitude of meanders. Simulations are then performed with a front
initially accompanied by one or several external vortices. The evolutions in
this case are compared with those of the unstable jet alone. On the $f$-plane,
when an external vortex is close to the front, this latter sheds a long filament
which wraps up around the vortex. This occurs over a period similar to that of
the instability of the isolated front. Cyclones are more efficient in tearing
such filaments offshore than anticyclones. On the $\beta$-plane, the filaments
are short and turbulence is confined to the vicinity of the front. At long times,
waves propagate along the front, thus extending turbulence alongshore. The
initial presence of a vortex alley leads to a stronger destabilization of the
front and to a larger cross-shore flux than for a single vortex, with many
filaments and small vortices pushed far offshore. In the ocean, this cross-shore
exchange has important consequences on the local biological activity.
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