4.6 Article

Subsurface Anticyclonic Eddy Transited from Kuroshio Shedding Eddy in the Northern South China Sea

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 53, Issue 3, Pages 841-861

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JPO-D-22-0106.1

Keywords

Eddies; In situ oceanic observations; Seasonal cycle; Mass fluxes; transport

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In May 2021, a lens-shaped subsurface anticyclonic eddy was observed in the northern South China Sea between 20 and 200 m. The eddy displayed positive sea level anomaly and negative sea surface temperature anomaly. The evolution of the eddy was influenced by anomalous water properties and seasonal changes in sea surface heat flux.
Subsurface eddies are a special type of oceanic eddy that display the maximum velocity in the subsurface layer. Based on field observations, a lens-shaped subsurface anticyclonic eddy (SAE) was detected in the northern South China Sea (SCS) in May 2021. The SAE was located between 20 and 200 m, with a shoaling of the seasonal thermocline and deepening of the main thermocline. Satellite images showed that the SAE exhibited positive sea level anomaly (SLA) and negative sea sur-face temperature (SST) anomaly. Eddy track indicated that this SAE originated from the Luzon Strait and was generated in the Kuroshio Loop Current (KLC) last winter. The evolution of the SAE was related to the anomalous water properties inside the eddy and the seasonal change of sea surface heat flux. In winter, the continuous surface cooling and Kuroshio intrusion led to a cold, salty core in the upper part of the anticyclonic eddy, which resulted in a subsurface-intensified structure through geo-strophic adjustment. As the season changed from winter to spring, sea surface temperature increased. The lens-shaped structure was formed when the seasonal thermocline appeared near the surface that capped the winter well-mixed water inside the eddy. From 1993 to 2021, nearly half of the winter KLC shedding eddies (12/25) survived to late spring and evolved into subsurface lens-shaped structures. This result indicates that the transition of KLC shedding eddy to SAE is a common phenomenon in the northern SCS, which is potentially important for local air-sea interaction, heat-salt balance, and biogeochemical processes.

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