Surface Quasi Geostrophic Reconstruction of Vertical Velocities and
Vertical Heat Fluxes in the Southern Ocean: Perspectives for SWOT
Abstract
Mesoscale currents account for 80% of the ocean’s kinetic energy,
whereas submesoscale currents capture 50% of the vertical velocity
variance.
SWOT’s first sea surface height (SSH) observations have a spatial
resolution an order of magnitude greater than traditional nadir-looking
altimeters and capture mesoscale and submesoscale features. This enables
the derivation of submesoscale vertical velocities, crucial for the
vertical transport of heat, carbon and nutrients between the ocean
interior and the surface.
This work focuses on a mesoscale energetic region south of Tasmania
using a coupled ocean-atmosphere simulation at km-scale resolution and
preliminary SWOT SSH observations. Vertical velocities (w), temperature
anomalies and vertical heat fluxes (VHF) from the surface down to 1000 m
are reconstructed using effective surface Quasi-Geostrophic (sQG)
theory. An independent method for reconstructing temperature anomalies,
mimicking an operational gridded product, is also developed. Results
show that sQG reconstructs 90% of the total \textit{w}
and VHF rms at scales down to 30 km just below the mixed layer and
50-70% of the rms for scales larger than 70 km at greater depth, with a
spatial correlation of ~0.6. The reconstruction is
spectrally coherent (>0.65) for scales larger than 30-40 km
at the surface, slightly degrading (~0.55) at depth.
The two temperature anomalies datasets yield similar results, indicating
the dominance of w on VHF.
RMS of sQG w and VHF derived from SWOT are twice as large as those
derived from conventional altimetry, highlighting the potential of SWOT
for reconstructing energetic meso and submesoscale dynamics in the ocean
interior.