Diagnosing Scale-Dependent Energy Cycles in a High-Resolution Isopycnal Ocean Model

Nora Loose, Scott Bachman, Ian Grooms, Malte Jansen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Energy exchanges between large-scale ocean currents and mesoscale eddies play an important role in setting the large-scale ocean circulation but are not fully captured in models. To better understand and quantify the ocean energy cycle, we apply along-isopycnal spatial filtering to output from an isopycnal 1/328 primitive equation model with idealized Atlantic and Southern Ocean geometry and topography. We diagnose the energy cycle in two frameworks: 1) a non-thickness-weighted framework, resulting in a Lorenz-like energy cycle, and 2) a thickness-weighted framework, resulting in the Bleck energy cycle. This paper shows that framework 2 is more useful for studying energy pathways when an isopycnal average is used. Next, we investigate the Bleck cycle as a function of filter scale. Baroclinic conversion generates mesoscale eddy kinetic energy over a wide range of scales and peaks near the deformation scale at high latitudes but below the deformation scale at low latitudes. Away from topography, an inverse cascade transfers kinetic energy from the mesoscales to larger scales. The upscale energy transfer peaks near the energy-containing scale at high latitudes but below the deformation scale at low latitudes. Regions down-stream of topography are characterized by a downscale kinetic energy transfer, in which mesoscale eddies are generated through barotropic instability. The scale-and flow-dependent energy pathways diagnosed in this paper provide a basis for evaluating and developing scale-and flow-aware mesoscale eddy parameterizations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)157-176
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Physical Oceanography
Volume53
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Eddies
  • Energy budget/balance
  • Filtering techniques
  • Isopycnal coordinates
  • Mesoscale processes
  • Ocean models

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