Full text: Proceedings of the Symposium on Global and Environmental Monitoring (Part 1)

Cycle 
Date 
1 
16 
Nov 
86 
2 
3 
Dec 
86 
3 
20 
Dec 
86 
4 
6 
Jan 
87 
5 
23 
Jan 
87 
6 
9 
Feb 
87 
7 
26 
Feb 
87 
8 
15 
Mar 
87 
9 
1 
Apr 
87 
10 
18 
Apr 
87 
11 
5 
May 
87 
12 
22 
May 
87 
13 
8 
Jun 
87 
14 
25 
Jun 
87 
15 
12 
Jul 
87 
16 
29 
Jul 
87 
17 
15 
Aug 
87 
18 
1 
Sep 
87 
19 
18 
Sep 
87 
20 
5 
Oct 
87 
21 
22 
Oct 
87 
22 
8 
Nov 
87 
Feb 88 
18 Feb 88 
6 Mar 88 
23 Mar 88 
Apr 88 
26 Apr 88 
13 May 88 
30 May 88 
14010 
Figure 5. Tracks of mean positions of height anomalies S, H, A, B and C, deduced from the 
image sequence of which Figure 3 is a part. Numbers indicate 17 day cycles 
whose mean dates are listed in the table at the left. Dashed lines indicate periods 
where a feature was not detectable. 
3 EDDY DISTRIBUTION AND MOVEMENT 
In Figures 3 and 4 interpolated height anomaly data for 
single 17 day periods are shown as grey scale images for 
different mean dates. The brightness scale is similar to that 
used in Figure 2. Data is interpolated between tracks using a 
gaussian weighted average with an e-folding distance of 
60km as described by Gower (1989b). This distance was 
chosen as being the minimum needed to smoothly fill 
between tracks. 
Figure 3 shows height anomalies in the north-east Pacific 
near the start of the Geosat ERM. The most striking, 
consistently observed height anomaly is indicated by the 
white arrow off the coast of California. This is a negative 
height anomaly (cyclonic eddy), moving westwards at about 
2.5 cm/s over the period November 1986 to August 1987 
from 126° 20’W to 133° 20’W at a latitude of 37°N. (Mean 
speed over 273 days = 2.51 cm/s towards 268°). A list of 
positions for this eddy is given in Table 1. 
Arrows in the Gulf of Alaska indicate eddy motion there, 
shown on a larger scale in Figure 4. This Figure shows the 
height anomalies during cycles 13, 15 and 17, corresponding 
to mean dates June 7, July 12 and August 15 1987. Several 
anticyclonic eddy-like features (positive height anomalies) 
are evident, especially in the north-west half of the study 
area, and a westward movement can be seen in most cases. 
Mesoscale features are less evident in the region to the 
south-east, which is dominated by larger scale anomalies 
with an annual period, as noted above. 
The data on the tracks plotted in Figure 4 (n = 166 to 173) 
are collected on days 13, 16, 2, 5, 8, 11, 14 and 1 respectively 
of the 17 day cycle. Displacements of the order of the track 
separation, occurring within this time could therefore be 
aliased on these plots. This would affect features with 
speeds greater than about lOcm/s. Slower moving features 
should be adequately sampled in time. 
Figure 5 (from Gower, 1989b) shows a plot of the mean 
centroid positions of eddies identified from the data 
sequence of repeat cycles of Geosat data, covering 
November 1986 to May 1988. Mean positions and velocities 
are listed in Table 2. Those shown represent the main 
features that formed between cycles 1 and 20. Some eddies 
that formed later, whose tracks would have overlapped 
those shown, are omitted. 
The eddy "S" is identified with the Sitka eddy previously 
reported in ship observations by Tabata (1982). The name 
"Haida" has been suggested for eddy "H". Other eddies are 
here labeled "A", "B" and "C". 
The positions in Figure 5 appear to cluster on the satellite 
tracks, suggesting that the eddies are under-sampled by the 
satellite tracks, that is, that the width of a typical height 
anomaly is less than the track separation. In this case 
attempts to track peaks in a noisy background will tend to 
give locations nearly centered on a track. 
Table 1 lists the results of eddy tracking in the Gulf of 
Alaska. Speeds are deduced from positions selected to 
reduce the effect of the clustering noted above. They are 
mostly in the range 1.0 to 1.4 cm/s, with headings between 
240 and 280° (through east from north), that is, westwards. 
Major differences from these mean values occur at the end 
of the data sequence (B 34 and H 34) or at the edge of the 
spatial coverage (C 13). Mean and standard deviations for 
all the values shown are 1.3 ± 0.4 cm/s in speed, and 252° 
±_ 28° in direction. 
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