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Abstract The decomposition of oceanic flow into its geostrophically balanced and unbalanced motions carries theoretical and practical significance for the oceanographic community. These two motions have distinct dynamical characteristics and affect the transport of tracers differently from one another. The launch of the Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite provides a prime opportunity to diagnose the surface balanced and unbalanced motions on a global scale at an unprecedented spatial resolution. Here, we apply dynamic‐mode decomposition (DMD), a linear‐algebraic data‐driven method, to tidally‐forced idealized and realistic numerical simulations at submesoscale‐permitting resolution and one‐day‐repeat SWOT observations of sea‐surface height (SSH) in the Gulf Stream downstream of Cape Hatteras, a region commonly referred to as the separated Gulf Stream. DMD is able to separate out the spatial modes associated with sub‐inertial periods from super‐inertial periods. The sub‐inertial modes of DMD can be used to extract geostrophically balanced motions from SSH fields, which have an imprint of internal gravity waves, so long as the data extends long enough in time. We utilize the statistical relation between relative vorticity and strain rate as the metric to gauge the extraction of geostrophy.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available August 1, 2026
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Abstract Through interactions with the continental margins, incident low‐mode internal tides (ITs) can be reflected, scattered to high modes, transmitted onto the shelf and dissipated. We investigate the fate of remotely generated mode‐1 ITs in the U.S. West Coast (USWC) continental margin using two 4‐km horizontal resolution regional simulations. These 1‐year long simulations have realistic stratification, and atmospheric, tidal, and sub‐tidal forcings. In addition, one of these simulations has remote internal wave (IW) forcing at the open boundaries while the other does not. To compute the IT reflectivity of the USWC margin, we separate the IT energy fluxes into onshore and offshore propagating components using a Discrete Fourier Transform in space and time. Overall, ∼20% of the remote mode‐1 semidiurnal IT energy fluxes reflect off the USWC margin, 40% is scattered to modes 2–5, and 7% is transmitted onto the shelf while the remaining is dissipated on the continental slope. Furthermore, our results reveal that differences in stratification, slope criticality, topographic roughness and angle of incidence cause these fractions to vary spatially and temporally along the USWC margin. However, there is no clear seasonal variability in these estimates. Remote IWs enhance the advection and diffusion of heat in the continental margin, resulting in cooling at the surface and warming at depth, and a reduction in the thermocline stratification. These results suggest that low‐mode ITs can cause water mass transformation in continental margins that are far away from their generation sites.more » « less
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Abstract The decay of the low‐mode internal tide due to the superharmonic energy cascade is investigated in a realistically forced global Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model simulation with 1/25° (4 km) horizontal grid spacing. Time‐mean and depth‐integrated supertidal kinetic energy is found to be largest near low‐latitude internal tide generation sites, such as the Bay of Bengal, Amazon Shelf, and Mascarene Ridge. The supertidal kinetic energy can make up to 50% of the total internal tide kinetic energy several hundred kilometers from the generation sites. As opposed to the tidal flux divergence, the supertidal flux divergence does not correlate with the barotropic to baroclinic energy conversion. Instead, the time‐mean and depth‐integrated supertidal flux divergence correlates with the nonlinear kinetic energy transfers from (sub)tidal to supertidal frequency bands as estimated with a novel coarse‐graining approach. The regular spaced banding patterns of the surface‐intensified nonlinear energy transfers are attributed to semidiurnal mode 1 and mode 2 internal waves that interfere constructively at the surface. This causes patches where both surface tidal kinetic energy and nonlinear energy transfers are elevated. The simulated internal tide off the Amazon Shelf steepens significantly near these patches, generating solitary‐like waves in good agreement with Synthetic Aperture Radar imagery. Globally, we find that regions of high supertidal energy flux also show a high correlation with observed instances of internal solitary waves.more » « less
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Abstract Internal waves contain a large amount of energy in the ocean and are an important source of turbulent mixing. Ocean mixing is relevant for climate because it drives vertical transport of water, heat, carbon and other tracers. Understanding the life cycle of internal waves, from generation to dissipation, is therefore important for improving the representation of ocean mixing in climate models. Here, we provide evidence from a regional realistic numerical simulation in the northeastern Pacific that the wind can play an important role in damping internal waves through current feedback. This results in a reduction of 67% of wind power input at near-inertial frequencies in the region of study. Wind-current feedback also provides a net energy sink for internal tides, removing energy at a rate of 0.2 mW/m$$^2$$ on average, corresponding to 8% of the local internal tide generation at the Mendocino ridge. The temporal variability and modal distribution of this energy sink are also investigated.more » « less
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In this study, we investigate the transition of semidiurnal Kelvin waves into Hybrid Kelvin-Edge (HKE) waves and associated generation of internal tides at widening shelves using theory, a realistic global baroclinic ocean model simulation, and quasi-realistic regional barotropic model simulations. Using the global model simulation, we identify several areas where a tidal HKE wave transition co-exists with internal wave generation. Of all areas considered, the Celtic Sea/Bay of Biscay shelf has the widest shelf and the strongest internal tide generation. We find that the global simulation agrees better with the theoretical Kelvin modes on the narrow than with the hybrid edge modes on the wide shelves. To help us understand the effect of complex, realistic bathymetry on the HKE wave transition, we perform quasi-realistic 1/25◦ barotropic simulations of the Celtic Sea/Bay of Biscay shelf areas. In these simulations, we gradually change the realistic bathymetry to a more idealized bathymetry. The idealized simulations show that the complex bathymetry steers the barotropic energy flux and causes standing wave patterns, which mask the HKE wave transition. Based on this analysis, we conclude that the HKE wave transition in the Celtic Sea/Bay of Biscay and other shelf areas in the global ocean is most likely masked by the effects of complex bathymetry and that offshelf baroclinic fluxes cannot be exclusively attributed to the HKE wave transition.more » « less
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The effects of horizontal resolution and wave drag damping on the semidiurnal M2 tidal energetics are studied for two realistically-forced global HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) simulations with 41 layers and horizontal resolutions of 8 km (H12) and 4 km (H25). In both simulations, the surface tidal error is minimized by tuning the strength of the linear wave drag, which is a parameterization of the surface-tide energy conversion to the unresolved baroclinic wave modes. In both simulations the M2 surface tide error with TPXO8-atlas, an altimetry constrained model, is 2.6 cm. Compared to H12, the surface tide energy conversion to the resolved vertical modes is increased by 50% in H25. This coincides with an equivalent reduction in the tuned loss of energy from the surface tide to the wave drag. For the configurations studied here, the horizontal and not the vertical resolution is the factor limiting the number of vertical modes that are resolved in most of the global ocean: modes 1–2 in H12 and modes 1–5 in H25. The wave drag also dampens the resolved internal tides. The 40% reduction in wave-drag strength does not result in a proportional increase in the mode-1 energy density in H25. In the higher-resolution simulations, topographic mode-scattering and wave–wave interactions are better resolved. This allows for an energy flux out of mode 1 to the higher modes, mitigating the need for an internal tide damping term. The HYCOM simulations are validated with analytical conversion models and altimetry-inferred sea-surface height, fluxes, and surface tide dissipation. H25 agrees best with these data sets to within 10%. To facilitate the comparison of stationary tide signals extracted from time series with different durations, we successfully apply a spatially-varying correction factor.more » « less
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Abstract Turbulent mixing in the ocean is key to regulate the transport of heat, freshwater and biogeochemical tracers, with strong implications for Earth’s climate. In the deep ocean, tides supply much of the mechanical energy required to sustain mixing via the generation of internal waves, known as internal tides, whose fate—the relative importance of their local versus remote breaking into turbulence—remains uncertain. Here, we combine a semi-analytical model of internal tide generation with satellite and in situ measurements to show that from an energetic viewpoint, small-scale internal tides, hitherto overlooked, account for the bulk (>50%) of global internal tide generation, breaking and mixing. Furthermore, we unveil the pronounced geographical variations of their energy proportion, ignored by current parameterisations of mixing in climate-scale models. Based on these results, we propose a physically consistent, observationally supported approach to accurately represent the dissipation of small-scale internal tides and their induced mixing in climate-scale models.more » « less
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Abstract The geographical variability, frequency content, and vertical structure of near‐surface oceanic kinetic energy (KE) are important for air‐sea interaction, marine ecosystems, operational oceanography, pollutant tracking, and interpreting remotely sensed velocity measurements. Here, KE in high‐resolution global simulations (HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model; HYCOM, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology general circulation model; MITgcm), at the sea surface (0 m) and at 15 m, are compared with KE from undrogued and drogued surface drifters, respectively. Global maps and zonal averages are computed for low‐frequency (<0.5 cpd), near‐inertial, diurnal, and semidiurnal bands. Both models exhibit low‐frequency equatorial KE that is low relative to drifter values. HYCOM near‐inertial KE is higher than in MITgcm, and closer to drifter values, probably due to more frequently updated atmospheric forcing. HYCOM semidiurnal KE is lower than in MITgcm, and closer to drifter values, likely due to inclusion of a parameterized topographic internal wave drag. A concurrent tidal harmonic analysis in the diurnal band demonstrates that much of the diurnal flow is nontidal. We compute simple proxies of near‐surface vertical structure—the ratio 0 m KE/(0 m KE + 15 m KE) in model outputs, and the ratio undrogued KE/(undrogued KE + drogued KE) in drifter observations. Over most latitudes and frequency bands, model ratios track the drifter ratios to within error bars. Values of this ratio demonstrate significant vertical structure in all frequency bands except the semidiurnal band. Latitudinal dependence in the ratio is greatest in diurnal and low‐frequency bands.more » « less
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