A sigma-coordinate ocean model implemented in a wide area of the Southern Ocean and forced by steady climatological winds is used to analyze the variability of the Subantarctic Front in the southwestern Atlantic. The low-frequency variability yields regime shifts on an interannual time scale in the Argentine Basin connecting an active and a collapsed Zapiola Anticyclone. The high-frequency variability, analyzed through a wavelet analysis, presents complex patterns composed of mesoscale eddies and topographic Rossby waves. Low- and high-frequency indices introduced to characterize the variability reveal possible mechanisms of mutual interactions.
Intrinsic variability of the Subantarctic Front in the southwestern Atlantic: a model study
PIERINI, Stefano
2014-01-01
Abstract
A sigma-coordinate ocean model implemented in a wide area of the Southern Ocean and forced by steady climatological winds is used to analyze the variability of the Subantarctic Front in the southwestern Atlantic. The low-frequency variability yields regime shifts on an interannual time scale in the Argentine Basin connecting an active and a collapsed Zapiola Anticyclone. The high-frequency variability, analyzed through a wavelet analysis, presents complex patterns composed of mesoscale eddies and topographic Rossby waves. Low- and high-frequency indices introduced to characterize the variability reveal possible mechanisms of mutual interactions.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.