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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Physical Oceanography Année : 2006

Contributions of Wind Forcing and Surface Heating to Interannual Sea Level Variations in the Atlantic Ocean.

Cécile Cabanes
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Thierry Huck
Alain Colin de Verdiere
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Résumé

Interannual sea surface height variations in the Atlantic Ocean are examined from 10 years of high-precision altimeter data in light of simple mechanisms that describe the ocean response to atmospheric forcing: 1) local steric changes due to surface buoyancy forcing and a local response to wind stress via Ekman pumping and 2) baroclinic and barotropic oceanic adjustment via propagating Rossby waves and quasi-steady Sverdrup balance, respectively. The relevance of these simple mechanisms in explaining interannual sea level variability in the whole Atlantic Ocean is investigated. It is shown that, in various regions, a large part of the interannual sea level variability is related to local response to heat flux changes (more than 50% in the eastern North Atlantic). Except in a few places, a local response to wind stress forcing is less successful in explaining sea surface height observations. In this case, it is necessary to consider large-scale oceanic adjustments: the first baroclinic mode forced by wind stress explains about 70% of interannual sea level variations in the latitude band 18°–20°N. A quasi-steady barotropic Sverdrup response is observed between 40° and 50°N.

Domaines

Océanographie

Dates et versions

hal-00308769 , version 1 (01-08-2008)

Identifiants

Citer

Cécile Cabanes, Thierry Huck, Alain Colin de Verdiere. Contributions of Wind Forcing and Surface Heating to Interannual Sea Level Variations in the Atlantic Ocean.. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 2006, 36 (9), pp.1739-1750. ⟨10.1175/JPO2935.1⟩. ⟨hal-00308769⟩
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