1. Mean Flow in the Gulf of Mexico.
- Author
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Sturges, Wilton and Kenyon, Kern E.
- Subjects
- *
WATER currents , *MAGNETIC flux compression , *HYDRODYNAMICS , *TURBULENT diffusion (Meteorology) , *FLUID dynamics , *EDDY flux , *OCEAN currents - Abstract
Several independent data sources suggest that there is a net upper-layer mass flux O(3 Sv) (Sv ≡ 106 m3 s-1) to the west in the central Gulf of Mexico, even though the western gulf is a closed basin. A plausible explanation is that this net flux is pumped downward by the convergent wind-driven Ekman pumping, as is typical of all midlatitude anticlyclonic gyres. The downward flux can follow isopycnals to depths O(500–600 m) and deeper by eddy mixing; a mechanism for forcing deep water to the south through the Yucatan Channel is provided by the intrusion and ring-shedding cycle of the Loop Current. Potential vorticity maps show that a deep flow from the western gulf back to the Yucatan Channel is likely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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