Seasonal variability and dynamics of the Pacific north equatorial subsurface current

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Abstract

The North Equatorial Subsurface Current (NESC) is a subthermocline ocean current uncovered recently in the tropical Pacific Ocean, flowing westward below the North Equatorial Countercurrent. In this study, the dynamics of the seasonal cycle of this current are studied using historical shipboard acoustic Doppler current profiler measurements and Argo absolute geostrophic currents. Both data show a westward current at the depths of 200–1000 m between 48 and 68N, with a typical core speed of about 5 and 2 cm s-1, respectively. The subsurface current originates in the eastern Pacific, with its core descending to deeper isopycnal surfaces and moving to the equator as it flows westward. The zonal velocity of the NESC shows pronounced seasonal variability, with the annual-cycle harmonics of vertical isothermal displacement and zonal velocity presenting characters of vertically propagating baroclinic Rossby waves. A simple analytical Rossby wave model is employed to simulate the propagation of the seasonal variations of the westward zonal currents successfully, which is the basis for exploring the wind forcing dynamics. The results suggest that the wind curl forcing in the central-eastern basin between 1708 and 1408W associated with the meridional movement of the intertropical convergence zone dominates the NESC seasonal variability in the western Pacific, with the winds west of 1708W and east of 1408W playing a minor role in the forcing.

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Yang, Y., Li, X., Wang, J., & Yuan, D. (2020). Seasonal variability and dynamics of the Pacific north equatorial subsurface current. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 50(9), 2457–2474. https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-19-0261.1

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