Frequency dependence of near-surface oceanic kinetic energy from drifter observations and global high-resolution models
Brian K. Arbic, Shane Elipot, Jonathan M. Brasch, Dimitris Menemenlis,, Aurelien L. Ponte, Jay F. Shriver, Xiaolong Yu, Edward D. Zaron, Matthew H., Alford, Maarten C. Buijsman, Ryan Abernathey, Daniel Garcia, Lingxiao Guan,, Paige E. Martin, Arin D. Nelson

TL;DR
This study compares high-resolution ocean models with drifter data to analyze the frequency-dependent vertical structure of near-surface oceanic kinetic energy, revealing model-data agreements and latitudinal variations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of models and observations across multiple frequency bands and introduces a proxy for vertical energy structure.
Findings
Models show low equatorial KE compared to drifters.
HYCOM's near-inertial KE aligns better with drifters due to atmospheric forcing.
Significant vertical structure exists in most frequency bands.
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 15 m, are respectively compared with KE from undrogued and drogued surface drifters. Global maps and zonal averages are computed for low-frequency ( 0.5 cpd), near-inertial, diurnal, and semi-diurnal 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…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Climate variability and models · Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing
