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Altimeter-derived variability of surface velocities in the California Current System : 1. Evaluation of TOPEX altimeter velocity resolution

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Altimeter-derived variability of surface velocities in the California Current System : 1. Evaluation of TOPEX altimeter velocity resolution
Names Strub, P. Ted (creator)
Chereskin, Teresa K. (creator)
Niiler, Pearn P. (creator)
James, Corinne (creator)
Levine, Murray D. (creator)
Date Issued 1997-06-15 (iso8601)
Note Copyright 1997 by the American Geophysical Union
Abstract In this paper, we evaluate the temporal and horizontal resolution of geostrophic
surface velocities calculated from TOPEX satellite altimeter heights. Moored velocities
(from vector-averaging current meters and an acoustic Doppler current profiler) at depths
below the Ekman layer are used to estimate the temporal evolution and accuracy of
altimeter geostrophic surface velocities at a point. Surface temperature gradients from
satellite fields are used to determine the altimeter's horizontal resolution of features in the
velocity field. The results indicate that the altimeter resolves horizontal scales of 50-80
km in the along-track direction. The rms differences between the altimeter and current
meters are 7-8 cm s⁻¹, much of which comes from small-scale variability in the oceanic
currents. We estimate the error in the altimeter velocities to have an rms magnitude of
3-5 cm s⁻¹ or less. Uncertainties in the eddy momentum fluxes at crossovers are more
difficult to evaluate and may be affected by aliasing of fluctuations with frequencies
higher than the altimeter's Nyquist frequency of 0.05 cycles d⁻¹, as indicated by spectra
from subsampled current meter data. The eddy statistics that are in best agreement are
the velocity variances, eddy kinetic energy and the major axis of the variance ellipses.
Spatial averaging of the current meter velocities produces greater agreement with all
altimeter statistics and increases our confidence that the altimeter's momentum fluxes
and the orientation of its variance ellipses (the statistics differing the most with single
moorings) represent well the statistics of spatially averaged currents (scales of 50-100
km) in the ocean. Besides evaluating altimeter performance, the study reveals several
properties of the circulation in the California Current System: (1) velocity components
are not isotropic but are polarized, strongly so at some locations, (2) there are instances
of strong and persistent small-scale variability in the velocity, and (3) the energetic region
of the California Current is isolated and surrounded by a region of lower energy starting
500-700 km offshore. This suggests that the source of the high eddy energy within 500
km of the coast is the seasonal jet that develops each spring and moves offshore to the
central region of the California Current, rather than a deep-ocean eddy field approaching
the coast from farther offshore.
Genre Article
Identifier Strub, P. Ted, Teresa K. Chereskin, Pearn P. Niiler, Corinne James, and Murray D. Levine. "Altimeter-derived variability of surface velocities in the California Current System." Journal of Geophysical Research 102.C6 (): 12,727-12,748. Print.

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