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Journal article

Dipole vortices in the Great Australian Bight

From

CSIRO1

Aarhus University2

Department of Civil Engineering, Technical University of Denmark3

ARTEK, Section for Arctic Engineering and Sustainable Solutions, Department of Civil Engineering, Technical University of Denmark4

Shipboard measurements from late 2006 made by the Danish Galathea 3 Expedition and satellite sea surface temperature images revealed a chain of cool and warm mushroom' dipole vortices that mixed warm, salty, oxygen-poor waters on and near the continental shelf of the Great Australian Bight (GAB) with cooler, fresher, oxygen-rich waters offshore.

The alternating jets' flowing into the mushrooms were directed mainly northwards and southwards and differed in temperature by only 1.5 degrees C; however, the salinity difference was as much as 0.5, and therefore quite large. The GAB waters were slightly denser than the cooler offshore waters. The field of dipoles evolved and distorted, but appeared to drift westwards at 5km day-1 over two weeks, and one new mushroom carried GAB water southwards at 7km day(-1).

Other features encountered between Cape Leeuwin and Tasmania included the Leeuwin Current, the South Australian Current, the Flinders Current and the waters of Bass Strait.

Language: English
Year: 2015
Pages: 135-144
ISSN: 14486059 and 13231650
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1071/MF13305
ORCIDs: 0000-0001-5925-322X and Nielsen, Morten Holtegaard

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