A coarse-grained decomposition of surface geostrophic kinetic energy in
the global ocean
Abstract
We apply a coarse-grained decomposition of the ocean’s surface
geostrophic flow derived from satellite and numerical model products. In
the extra-tropics we find that roughly 60\% of the
global surface geostrophic kinetic energy is at scales between 100 km
and 500 km, peaking at ~300 km. Our analysis also
reveals a clear seasonality in the kinetic energy with a spring peak. We
show that traditional mean-fluctuation (or Reynolds) decomposition is
unable to robustly disentangle length-scales since the time mean flow
consists of a significant contribution (greater than 50%) from scales
<500 km. By coarse-graining in both space and time, we find
that every length-scale evolves over a wide range of time-scales.
Consequently, a running time-average of any duration reduces the energy
content of all length-scales, including those larger than 1000 km, and
is not effective at removing length-scales smaller than 300 km. By
contrasting our spatio-temporal analysis of numerical model and
satellite products, we show that the AVISO gridded product suppresses
temporal variations less than 10 days for all length-scales, especially
between 100 km and 500 km.