A two-dimensional array of current- and pressure-recording inverted echo sounders provided synoptic measurements of the upper and deep fluctuations in the Kuroshio Extension between 143° and 149°E with mesoscale resolution. Downstream-propagating meanders with periods of 3-60 days were always present between June 2004 and September 2005. Propagation speeds were estimated by two methods: spectral analysis of path displacements and complex empirical orthogonal functions (CEOF) analysis of along-path anomalies. The two methods produced similar results. Phase speeds increased smoothly from 10 km day -1 (0.12 m s -1) for meanders with wavelengths and periods [λ, T ] 5 [420 km, 40 days] to 35 km day -1 (0.41 m s -1) for [λ, T ] 5 [220 km, 6 days] meanders. This empirically derived dispersion relationship is indistinguishable from that obtained for Gulf Stream meanders downstream of Cape Hatteras. The deep ocean was populated with remotely generated, upstream-propagating eddies composed of a nearly depthindependent current structure. Upper meanders and deep eddies jointly spun up when they encountered each other with the deep eddy offset about a quarter wavelength ahead of the upper meander. Subsequently, as the upper and deep features moved past each other and the vertical offset changed, intensification ceased. © 2012 American Meteorological Society.
CITATION STYLE
Tracey, K. L., Watts, D. R., Donohue, K. A., & Ichikawa, H. (2012). Propagation of Kuroshio Extension meanders between 143° and 149°E. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 42(4), 581–601. https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-11-0138.1
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