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Flux comparison of Eulerian and Lagrangian estimates of Agulhas leakage: A case study using a numerical model

Erik van Sebille, Peter Jan van Leeuwen, Arne Biastoch, and Wilhelmus P. M. de Ruijter
In Deep Sea Research I, 2010, volume 57, pages 319-327, doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2009.12.006.

Abstract

Estimating the magnitude of Agulhas leakage, the volume flux of water from the Indian to the Atlantic Ocean, is difficult because of the presence of other circulation systems in the Agulhas region. Indian Ocean water in the Atlantic Ocean is vigorously mixed and diluted in the Cape Basin. Eulerian integration methods, where the velocity field perpendicular to a section is integrated to yield a flux, have to be calibrated so that only the flux by Agulhas leakage is sampled. Two Eulerian methods for estimating the magnitude of Agulhas leakage are tested within a high-resolution two-way nested model with the goal to devise a mooring-based measurement strategy. At the GoodHope line, a section halfway through the Cape Basin, the integrated velocity perpendicular to that line is compared to the magnitude of Agulhas leakage as determined from the transport carried by numerical Lagrangian floats. In the first method, integration is limited to the flux of water warmer and more saline than specific threshold values. These threshold values are determined by maximizing the correlation with the float-determined time series. By using the threshold values, approximately half of the leakage can directly be measured. The total amount of Agulhas leakage can be estimated using a linear regression, within a 90% confidence band of 12 Sv. In the second method, a subregion of the GoodHope line is sought so that integration over that subregion yields an Eulerian flux as close to the float-determined leakage as possible. It appears that when integration is limited within the model to the upper 300 m of the water column within 900 km of the African coast the time series have the smallest root-mean-square difference. This method yields a root-mean-square error of only 5.2 Sv but the 90% confidence band of the estimate is 20 Sv. It is concluded that the optimum thermohaline threshold method leads to more accurate estimates even though the directly measured transport is a factor of two lower than the actual magnitude of Agulhas leakage in this model.

Key figure

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Figure 3: The mean of the flux perpendicular to the GoodHope line (in Sverdrup per 50 m x 50 km grid cell) in the model run. See Fig. 1 for the location of the GoodHope line. Red colors denote a mean flux into the Atlantic Ocean while blue colors denote a mean flux into the Indian Ocean. The lines indicate the distribution of numerical float crossings (also in Sverdrup per 50 m x 50 km grid cell). The floats are released in the Agulhas Current over the entire water column. Note that for this distribution every crossing of a float is taken into account and that one float can cross the GoodHope line multiple times. The agreement between the velocity-integrated profile and the float transport is high in the upper 1000 m and until 1200 km offshore.