Surface cooling caused by rare but intense near-inertial wave induced mixing in the tropical Atlantic

Type Article
Date 2020-07
Language English
Author(s) Hummels RebeccaORCID1, Dengler MarcusORCID1, Rath WilliORCID1, Foltz Gregory R.2, Schutte Florian1, Fischer TimORCID1, Brandt PeterORCID1, 3
Affiliation(s) 1 : GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Kiel, Germany
2 : NOAA/AOML, Miami, FL, USA
3 : Kiel University, Kiel, Germany
Source Nature Communications (2041-1723) (Nature Publishing Group), 2020-07 , Vol. 11 , N. 1 , P. 3829 (13p.)
DOI 10.1038/s41467-020-17601-x
WOS© Times Cited 9
Keyword(s) Atmospheric science, Biogeochemistry, Climate sciences, Ocean sciences
Abstract

The direct response of the tropical mixed layer to near-inertial waves (NIWs) has only rarely been observed. Here, we present upper-ocean turbulence data that provide evidence for a strongly elevated vertical diffusive heat flux across the base of the mixed layer in the presence of a NIW, thereby cooling the mixed layer at a rate of 244Wm(-2) over the 20h of continuous measurements. We investigate the seasonal cycle of strong NIW events and find that despite their local intermittent nature, they occur preferentially during boreal summer, presumably associated with the passage of atmospheric African Easterly Waves. We illustrate the impact of these rare but intense NIW induced mixing events on the mixed layer heat balance, highlight their contribution to the seasonal evolution of sea surface temperature, and discuss their potential impact on biological productivity in the tropical North Atlantic. How the tropical mixed layer of the ocean reacts to near-inertial waves has rarely been observed directly. Here, the authors present new data that shows strongly elevated vertical diffusive heat flux in the presence of near-inertial waves, causing a cooling of the mixed layer that is particularly strong in summer.

Licence CC-BY
Full Text
File Pages Size Access
Publisher's official version 13 6 MB Open access
Supplementary Information 7 622 KB Open access
Peer Review File 73 2 MB Open access
Top of the page