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(Reference retrieved automatically from Web of Science through information on FAPESP grant and its corresponding number as mentioned in the publication by the authors.)

Multiyear measurements of the oceanic and atmospheric boundary layers at the Brazil-Malvinas confluence region

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Author(s):
Pezzi, Luciano Ponzi [1] ; de Souza, Ronald Buss [2] ; Acevedo, Otavio [3] ; Wainer, Ilana [4] ; Mata, Mauricio M. [5] ; Garcia, Carlos A. E. [6] ; de Camargo, Ricardo [7]
Total Authors: 7
Affiliation:
[1] Natl Inst Space Res. Sao Jose Dos Campos
[2] Natl Inst Space Res. So Reg Ctr Space Res
[3] Univ Fed Santa Maria. Dept Phys
[4] Univ Sao Paulo. Dept Phys Oceanog
[5] Fed Univ Rio Grande. Inst Oceanog
[6] Fed Univ Rio Grande. Inst Oceanog
[7] Univ Sao Paulo. Inst Astron Geophys & Atmospher Sci
Total Affiliations: 7
Document type: Journal article
Source: JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES; v. 114, OCT 1 2009.
Web of Science Citations: 9
Abstract

This study analyzes and discusses data taken from oceanic and atmospheric measurements performed simultaneously at the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence (BMC) region in the southwestern Atlantic Ocean. This area is one of the most dynamical frontal regions of the world ocean. Data were collected during four research cruises in the region once a year in consecutive years between 2004 and 2007. Very few studies have addressed the importance of studying the air-sea coupling at the BMC region. Lateral temperature gradients at the study region were as high as 0.3 degrees C km(-1) at the surface and subsurface. In the oceanic boundary layer, the vertical temperature gradient reached 0.08 degrees C m(-1) at 500 m depth. Our results show that the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) at the BMC region is modulated by the strong sea surface temperature (SST) gradients present at the sea surface. The mean MABL structure is thicker over the warmside of the BMC where Brazil Current (BC) waters predominate. The opposite occurs over the coldside of the confluence where waters from the Malvinas (Falkland) Current (MC) are found. The warmside of the confluence presented systematically higher MABL top height compared to the coldside. This type of modulation at the synoptic scale is consistent to what happens in other frontal regions of the world ocean, where the MABL adjusts itself to modifications along the SST gradients. Over warm waters at the BMC region, the MABL static instability and turbulence were increased while winds at the lower portion of the MABL were strong. Over the coldside of the BC/MC front an opposite behavior is found: the MABL is thinner and more stable. Our results suggest that the sea-level pressure (SLP) was also modulated locally, together with static stability vertical mixing mechanism, by the surface condition during all cruises. SST gradients at the BMC region modulate the synoptic atmospheric pressure gradient. Postfrontal and prefrontal conditions produce opposite thermal advections in the MABL that lead to different pressure intensification patterns across the confluence. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 05/02359-0 - In situ observations of the ocean-atmosphere interactions at the Brazil-Malvinas confluence region
Grantee:Luciano Ponzi Pezzi
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants