Advances in Earth Science ›› 2020, Vol. 35 ›› Issue (6): 568-580. doi: 10.11867/j.issn.1001-8166.2020.050

Previous Articles     Next Articles

The Surface and Three-dimensional Characteristics of Mesoscale Eddies: A Review

Yongchui Zhang 1, 2( ),Ning Wang 1,Lin Zhou 1,Kefeng Liu 1,Haodi Wang 1   

  1. 1.College of Meteorology and Oceanography, National University of Defense Technology, Nanjing 211101, China
    2.Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), Zhuhai Guangdong 519082, China
  • Received:2020-04-21 Revised:2020-05-22 Online:2020-06-10 Published:2020-07-06
  • About author:Zhang Yongchui (1982-), male, Shuyang County, Jiangsu Province, Associate professor. Research areas include ocean circulation dynamics, mesoscale eddies. E-mail: zyc@nudt.edu.cn
  • Supported by:
    the National Key Research and Development Program of China “The development of parameterization of key physical processes in high-resolution ocean models”(2017YFA0604100);The National Natural Science Foundation of China ”Relationship between the reverse trend of sea level change in the western and eastern subtropical North Pacific and climate modes”(41406003)

Yongchui Zhang, Ning Wang, Lin Zhou, Kefeng Liu, Haodi Wang. The Surface and Three-dimensional Characteristics of Mesoscale Eddies: A Review[J]. Advances in Earth Science, 2020, 35(6): 568-580.

Mesoscale eddies, which are widely found in the oceans, play a vital role in momentum, energy, heat and mass transport. The Euler method for identifying mesoscale eddies using satellite altimeter data was presented in detail, including closed SLA contours, OW numbers, Winding-Angle and flow vector methods. The results show that mesoscale eddies are almost nonlinear and solid-body rotation. The long-lived eddies with lifetimes ≥16 weeks have an average lifetime of 32 weeks and an average propagation distance of 550 km. Their mean amplitude and a speed-based radius scale as defined by the automated procedure are 8 cm and 90 km, respectively. The method combining with SLA and Argo profiles to composite the three-dimensional structure were addressed. Due to the different temperature and salt structure in the various oceans of the world, the eddies in different oceans show different three-dimensional structures, which are influenced by both the generation and local temperature and salinity. Two special types of eddies were introduced from the perspective of generation, evolution and dissipation processes, namely the Loop Current Ring in the Gulf of Mexico and Mediterranean eddy in the Atlantic Ocean. Finally, issues including submesoscale processes, dissipation of eddies and subthermocline eddies were discussed, and some future research directions were proposed.

No related articles found!
Viewed
Full text


Abstract