Largely zonal winds in the Southern Ocean drive an equatorward Ekman transport that constitutes the shallowest limb of the meridional overturning circulation of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC). Despite its importance, there have been no direct observations of the open ocean Ekman balance in the Southern Ocean until now. Using high-resolution repeat observations of upper-ocean velocity in Drake Passage, a mean Ekman spiral is resolved and Ekman transport is computed. The mean Ekman currents decay in amplitude and rotate anticyclonically with depth, penetrating to ∼100-m depth, above the base of the annual mean mixed layer at 120 m. The rotation depth scale exceeds the e-folding scale of the speed by about a factor of 3, resulting in a current spiral that is compressed relative to predictions from Ekman theory. Transport estimated from the observed currents is mostly equatorward and in good agreement with the Ekman transport computed from four different gridded wind products. The mean temperature of the Ekman layer is not distinguishable from temperature at the surface. Turbulent eddy viscosities inferred from Ekman theory and a direct estimate of the time-averaged stress were O(102-103) cm2 s-1. The latter calculation results in a profile of eddy viscosity that decreases in magnitude with depth and a time-averaged stress that is not parallel to the time-averaged vertical shear. The compression of the Ekman spiral and the nonparallel shear-stress relation are likely due to time averaging over the cycling of the stratification in response to diurnal buoyancy fluxes, although the action of surface waves and the oceanic response to high-frequency wind variability may also contribute. © 2009 American Meteorological Society.
CITATION STYLE
Lenn, Y. D., & Chereskin, T. K. (2009). Observations of Ekman currents in the Southern Ocean. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 39(3), 768–779. https://doi.org/10.1175/2008JPO3943.1
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