(Today's post was written by scientist and co-Principal Investigator Eric Kunze)
As pointed out in a previous blog, in order to follow
post-storm restratification of the mixed-layer, we need to simultaneously find
a deep mixed-layer, horizontal density gradients which imply vertical shear
(through the thermal-wind balance) and storms to homogenize the mixed-layer. At
the same time, we need to avoid too much horizontal shear which would act to
disperse our swarm of freely drifting profiling floats. This is a tough
combination but historical measurements were favorable. We have had no trouble
finding density fronts but have been wary of deploying the floats in them
because of our concern of finding horizontal shear. At our first site, stratification extended to the surface
with only hints of a previous mixed layer. Furthermore, passing storms from the west tended to veer
north of our latitude before reaching our longitude. Moving north, our second
site had a mixed-layer thickness of 20 m (when it was supposed to be 100 m) and
the storms continued to veer north. We have moved further north, though limited
by the strength of the oncoming storms, to find a mixed layer 70-80 m thick at
35N, 139W. 23 floats are now deployed across a narrow density front, all but 2
that we brought along.
To get a better sense of whether the mixed layer was behaving
as expected, time-series of various variables have been averaged over the mixed
layer for each float depth profile (roughly once an hour). The easiest to
explain are the top and bottom panels which show mixed-layer density σθ (top), east
velocity u (red) and north velocity v (blue) bottom panel). Density lightens
midway through 24 MAR, then undergoes weak diurnal oscillations, lightening
during daylight and getting denser at night. The spread of 0.02 is a signature
of horizontal variability that is needed for restratification. The velocities
show that there is not a single but multiple frequencies of a day or so. The
north velocity cresting before east velocity is a signature of low-frequency
(1-day period) internal waves.
Figure showing various characteristics of the mixed layer, including density, velocity, stratification, and shear. (Figure credit: Eric Kunze) |
The second panel from the top shows mixed-layer
stratification N (green) and vertical
shear |Vz| (red). Before 28 MAR,
stratification and shear undergo daily oscillations, strengthening during the
day and weakening with occasional very weak N
at night. The daylight restratification could be due to the the advection of
lighter water over heavier water that we are looking for or warming by the sun.
After mid 27 MAR, the stratification increases by a factor of 2 and no longer
exhibits nocturnal weakening, a signature of strong restratification. perhaps
associated with the larger density contrasts.
In the third panel from the top, vertical shear is repeated
(red) along with horizontal density gradients normalized to mimic the
thermal-wind balance that dominates much low-frequency variability in the
ocean. Thermal wind balance in essence is a balance between horizontal density
gradients and vertical shear. Strictly
speaking, both should be smoothed over more than a day for the balance to hold.
The signals are comparable but sometimes horizontal gradients are larger than
shear, sometimes small. This comparison can be confounded by wind-driven
mixed-layer shear and near-inertial wave vertical shear, both of which can act
with or against thermal wind shear.
So we don't have the answer yet.
Years of analysis will be needed to combine results from the
EM floats shown here with towyo measurements from SWIMS and the air-sea flux
buoy. But we do see a signal of
restratification and have enough horizontal coverage to evaluate contributions from
advection vs. air-sea fluxes.