Title :
Remote sensing of dipole rings
Author :
Hooker, Stanford B. ; Mied, Richard P. ; Brown, James W. ; Kirwan, A.D., Jr.
Author_Institution :
Lab. for Hydrospheric Processes, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
fDate :
11/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Historical satellite-derived sea surface temperature (SST) data are reanalyzed with a zebra color palette and a thermal separatrix method. The new results from this reanalysis are as follows: (a) thirteen observational sequences of six rings from the Gulf Stream and the Brazil Current, which have historically been interpreted as solitary vortices or monopoles are shown to have a dipolar character; (b) some of these dipole rings have been observed in the open ocean, thereby eliminating the possibility that they are sustained by topographic interactions with the continental slope; (c) whether interacting with other features or evolving as isolated circulations, dipoles are seen to rotate within a relatively narrow range of approximately 4-8° day -1 (interacting) and 10-15° day-1 (isolated); and (d) feature tracking delineates energetic fluid in both vortices and eliminates the possibility of interpreting dipole rings as transient features produced by active monopoles and patches of entrained fluid
Keywords :
oceanographic regions; oceanography; vortices; Brazil Current; Gulf Stream; North Atlantic; SST; dipole ring; mesoscale vortex; ocean dynamics; remote sensing observations; sea surface temperature; surface current; thermal separatrix method; vortices; zebra color palette; Atmospheric waves; Color; Laboratories; Mechanical factors; Numerical models; Ocean temperature; Remote sensing; Sea surface; Surface topography; Temperature sensors;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on