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Heat and salt balances over the northern California shelf in winter and spring

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Title Heat and salt balances over the northern California shelf in winter and spring
Names Dever, Edward P. (creator)
Lentz, S. J. (creator)
Date Issued 1994-08-15 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract Heat and salt balances are estimated over the northern California shelf from
early December 1988 through late February 1989 (winter) and from early March
through early May 1989 (spring) from moored meteorological and oceanographic time
series taken in 93 m of water 6.3 km from the coast. We find a winter mean offshore
heat flux of 8.7 x 10⁵ W m¯¹, about a factor of 5 smaller than earlier estimates of the
mean summer (upwelling season) offshore heat flux on the northern California shelf.
The mean offshore heat flux is predominantly in the surface boundary layer and is
balanced by an along-shelf heat flux divergence (as represented by an eddy along-shelf
temperature gradient flux) and a cooling trend making the mean winter heat balance
fundamentally three dimensional. In contrast to winter, the spring mean offshore heat
flux of 6.4 x l0⁵ W m¯¹ is balanced by a positive air-sea heat flux of 8.3 x 10⁵ W
m¯¹ which is about 80% of the mean air-sea heat flux in summer. This makes the
spring mean heat budget primarily two dimensional, like the summer mean heat budget
off northern California. On timescales of days the dominant terms in the fluctuating
heat budget in both winter and spring are the cross-shelf heat flux and local changes in
heat content. These are well correlated with each other and with the local along-shelf
wind stress. The along-shelf temperature gradient flux, uncorrelated with the along-shelf
wind stress, is usually weak on timescales of days. Occurrences when it is strong
are interpreted as effects of mesoscale features. Mean and fluctuating cross-shelf salt
fluxes provide essentially the same information as cross-shelf heat fluxes. This is not
surprising in light of the strong temperature-salinity relationship on the northern
California shelf.
Genre Article
Identifier Dever, E. P., and Lentz, S. J., (1994). Heat and salt balances over the northern California shelf in winter and spring

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