Journal Information

Online ISSN: 1520-0485
Print ISSN: 0022-3670
Publishing Frequency: Monthly

Volume 37, Issue 5 (May 2007)

Planetary Wave Response to Surface Forcing and Instability in the Presence of Mean Flow and Topography

Peter D. Killworth and Jeffrey R. Blundell

National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom





Abstract

The local response of an ocean with slowly varying mean flow, stratification, and topography to two sources of disturbance is examined, concentrating on whether the resulting surface elevations are observable. The first is the ocean response to surface forcing (Ekman pumping or buoyancy forcing). For typical amplitudes of random forcing, while much of the ocean response is small (surface elevations less than 1 mm), there are sufficient near resonances (or pseudoresonances involving a critical layer) to produce elevations of 1 cm or more in much of the ocean. The second source is baroclinic instability. The fastest linear growth rate, as well as those for specific wavelengths, is computed globally. Almost all of the ocean is baroclinically unstable, and the most unstable waves are found to possess a small wavelength (often less than 10 km) with a disturbance concentrated near the surface: e-folding times O(20 days) are frequently found. However, the phase speed for the disturbances is almost everywhere slower westward than free planetary waves with mean flow and topography. Since the free waves propagate at speeds similar to observations, instability may be a good source of variability but is probably not responsible directly for observed wave propagation.

Keywords: Waves, Instability, Topographic effects, Bouyancy, Ekman pumping

Received: November 14, 2005; Accepted: August 25, 2006

Corresponding author address: Peter Killworth, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, Empress Dock, Southampton SO14 3ZH, United Kingdom. Email:

Cited by

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Ross Tulloch, John Marshall, Chris Hill, K. Shafer Smith. Scales, growth rates and spectral fluxes of baroclinic instability in the ocean. Journal of Physical Oceanography 0:0,
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K. Shafer Smith, John Marshall. (2009) Evidence for Enhanced Eddy Mixing at Middepth in the Southern Ocean. Journal of Physical Oceanography 39:1, 50-69
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Ross Tulloch, John Marshall, K. Shafer Smith. (2009) Interpretation of the propagation of surface altimetric observations in terms of planetary waves and geostrophic turbulence. Journal of Geophysical Research 114:C2,
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CrossRef
Peter D. Killworth. (2008) A Simple Linear Model of the Depth Dependence of the Wind-Driven Variability of the Meridional Overturning Circulation. Journal of Physical Oceanography 38:2, 492-502
Online publication date: 1-Feb-2008.
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Joël J-M. Hirschi, Peter D. Killworth, Jeffrey R. Blundell. (2007) Subannual, Seasonal, and Interannual Variability of the North Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. Journal of Physical Oceanography 37:5, 1246-1265
Online publication date: 1-May-2007.
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