Authors
WPM de de Ruijter, A Biastoch, SS Drijfhout, JRE Lutjeharms, RP Matano, T Pichevin, PJ Van Leeuwen, Wilbert Weijer
Publication date
1999/9/15
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
Volume
104
Issue
C9
Pages
20885-20910
Description
Interocean exchange of heat and salt around South Africa is thought to be a key link in the maintenance of the global overturning circulation of the ocean. It takes place at the Agulhas Retroflection, largely by the intermittent shedding of enormous rings that penetrate into the South Atlantic Ocean. This makes it extremely hard to estimate the inter ocean fluxes. Estimates of direct Agulhas leakage from hydrographic and tracer data range between 2 and 10 Sv (1 Sv = 106 m3 s−1). The average ring shedding frequency, determined from satellite information, is approximately six rings per year. Their associated interocean volume transport is between 0.5 and 1.5 Sv per ring. A number of Agulhas rings have been observed to cross the South Atlantic. They decay exponentially to less than half their initial size (measured by their available potential energy) within 1000 km from the shedding region. Consequently, most of their …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
WPM de Ruijter, A Biastoch, SS Drijfhout… - Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1999