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Internal-tide vertical structure and steric sea surface height signature south of New Caledonia revealed by glider observations

Authors :
A. Bendinger
S. Cravatte
L. Gourdeau
L. Rainville
C. Vic
G. Sérazin
F. Durand
F. Marin
J.-L. Fuda
Source :
Ocean Science, Vol 20, Pp 945-964 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2024.

Abstract

In this study, we exploit autonomous underwater glider data to infer internal-tide dynamics south of New Caledonia, an internal-tide-generation hot spot in the southwestern tropical Pacific. By fitting a sinusoidal function to vertical displacements at each depth using a least-squares method, we simultaneously estimate diurnal and semidiurnal tides. Our analysis reveals regions of enhanced tidal activity, strongly dominated by the semidiurnal tide. To validate our findings, we compare the glider observations to a regional numerical simulation that includes tidal forcing. This comparison assesses the simulation's realism in representing tidal dynamics and evaluates the glider's ability to infer internal-tide signals and their signature in sea surface height (SSH). The glider observations and a pseudo glider, simulated using hourly numerical model output with identical sampling, exhibit similar amplitude and phase characteristics along the glider track. Existing discrepancies are in large part explained by tidal incoherence induced by eddy–internal-tide interactions. We infer the semidiurnal internal-tide signature in steric SSH by the integration of vertical displacements. Within the upper 1000 m, the pseudo glider captures roughly 78 % of the steric SSH total variance explained by the full water column signal. This value increases to over 90 % when projecting the pseudo glider's vertical displacements onto climatological baroclinic modes and extrapolating to full depth. Notably, the steric SSH from glider observations aligns closely with empirical estimates derived from satellite altimetry, highlighting the internal tide's predominant coherent nature during the glider's sampling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18120784 and 18120792
Volume :
20
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Ocean Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4c87722eae6d43c88a0734633a6e86a7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/os-20-945-2024