Anthony Bosse
University of Paris
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Featured researches published by Anthony Bosse.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
Loïc Houpert; X. Durrieu de Madron; Pierre Testor; Anthony Bosse; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Marie-Noëlle Bouin; Denis Dausse; H. Le Goff; Stéphane Kunesch; Matthieu Labaste; Laurent Coppola; Laurent Mortier; Patrick Raimbault
We present here a unique oceanographic and meteorological data set focus on the deep convection processes. Our results are essentially based on in situ data (mooring, research vessel, glider, and profiling float) collected from a multiplatform and integrated monitoring system (MOOSE: Mediterranean Ocean Observing System on Environment), which monitored continuously the northwestern Mediterranean Sea since 2007, and in particular high-frequency potential temperature, salinity, and current measurements from the mooring LION located within the convection region. From 2009 to 2013, the mixed layer depth reaches the seabed, at a depth of 2330m, in February. Then, the violent vertical mixing of the whole water column lasts between 9 and 12 days setting up the characteristics of the newly formed deep water. Each deep convection winter formed a new warmer and saltier “vintage” of deep water. These sudden inputs of salt and heat in the deep ocean are responsible for trends in salinity (3.3 ± 0.2 × 10−3/yr) and potential temperature (3.2 ± 0.5 × 10−3 C/yr) observed from 2009 to 2013 for the 600–2300 m layer. For the first time, the overlapping of the three “phases” of deep convection can be observed, with secondary vertical mixing events (2–4 days) after the beginning of the restratification phase, and the restratification/spreading phase still active at the beginning of the following deep convection event.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Anthony Bosse; Pierre Testor; Laurent Mortier; Louis Prieur; Vincent Taillandier; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Laurent Coppola
Since 2007, gliders have been regularly deployed in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea, a crucial region regarding the thermohaline circulation of the Mediterranean Sea. It revealed for the first time very warm (10.48C) and saline (10.1) submesoscale anticyclones at intermediate depth characterized by a small radius (
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
Anthony Bosse; Pierre Testor; Loïc Houpert; Pierre Damien; Louis Prieur; Daniel J. Hayes; Vincent Taillandier; Xavier Durrieu de Madron; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Laurent Coppola; Johannes Karstensen; Laurent Mortier
5 km), high Rossby (
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
X. Durrieu de Madron; S. Ramondenc; Léo Berline; Loïc Houpert; Anthony Bosse; S. Martini; Lionel Guidi; Pascal Conan; C. Curtil; N. Delsaut; S. Kunesch; Jean-François Ghiglione; Patrick Marsaleix; Mireille Pujo-Pay; Tatiana Severin; Pierre Testor; C. Tamburini
0.3), and Burger (
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Pierre Testor; Anthony Bosse; Loïc Houpert; Félix Margirier; Laurent Mortier; Hervé Legoff; Denis Dausse; Matthieu Labaste; Johannes Karstensen; Daniel J. Hayes; Antonio Olita; Alberto Ribotti; Katrin Schroeder; Jacopo Chiggiato; Reiner Onken; Emma Heslop; Baptiste Mourre; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Nicolas Mayot; Héloïse Lavigne; Orens Pasqueron de Fommervault; Laurent Coppola; Louis Prieur; Vincent Taillandier; Xavier Durrieu de Madron; François Bourrin; Gaël Many; Pierre Damien; Claude Estournel; Patrick Marsaleix
0.7) numbers. They are likely order of 10 to be formed each year, have a life time order a year and certainly contribute significantly to the spreading of the Levantine Intermediate Waters (LIW) toward the whole subbasin, thus potentially impacting wintertime vertical mixing through hydrographical and dynamical preconditioning. They could be mainly formed by the combined action of turbulent mixing and flow detachment of the northward flow of LIW at the northwestern headland of Sardinia. Upwelling conditions along the western coast of Sardinia associated with a southward geostrophic flow within the upper layers seem to play a key role in their formation process.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Anthony Bosse; Pierre Testor; Nicolas Mayot; Louis Prieur; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Laurent Mortier; Hervé Le Goff; Claire Gourcuff; Laurent Coppola; Héloïse Lavigne; Patrick Raimbault
Since 2010, an intense effort in the collection of in situ observations has been carried out in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea thanks to gliders, profiling floats, regular cruises, and mooring lines. This integrated observing system enabled a year-to-year monitoring of the deep waters formation that occurred in the Gulf of Lions area during four consecutive winters (2010–2013). Vortical structures remnant of wintertime deep vertical mixing events were regularly sampled by the different observing platforms. These are Submesoscale Coherent Vortices (SCVs) characterized by a small radius (∼5–8 km), strong depth-intensified orbital velocities (∼10–20 cm s−1) with often a weak surface signature, high Rossby (∼0.5) and Burger numbers O(0.5–1). Anticyclones transport convected waters resulting from intermediate (∼300 m) to deep (∼2000 m) vertical mixing. Cyclones are characterized by a 500–1000 m thick layer of weakly stratified deep waters (or bottom waters that cascaded from the shelf of the Gulf of Lions in 2012) extending down to the bottom of the ocean at ∼2500 m. The formation of cyclonic eddies seems to be favored by bottom-reaching convection occurring during the study period or cascading events reaching the abyssal plain. We confirm the prominent role of anticyclonic SCVs and shed light on the important role of cyclonic SCVs in the spreading of a significant amount (∼30%) of the newly formed deep waters away from the winter mixing areas. Since they can survive until the following winter, they can potentially have a great impact on the mixed layer deepening through a local preconditioning effect.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Robin Waldman; Marine Herrmann; Samuel Somot; Thomas Arsouze; Rachid Benshila; Anthony Bosse; Jerome Chanut; Hervé Giordani; Florence Sevault; Pierre Testor
The Gulf of Lions in the northwestern Mediterranean is one of the few sites around the world ocean exhibiting deep open-ocean convection. Based on 6-year long (2009-2015) time series from a mooring in the convection region, shipborne measurements from repeated cruises, from 2012 to 2015, and glider measurements, we report evidence of bottom thick nepheloid layer formation, which is coincident with deep sediment resuspension induced by bottom-reaching convection events. This bottom nepheloid layer, which presents a maximum thickness of around 2000 m in the center of the convection region, probably results from the action of cyclonic eddies that are formed during the convection period and can persist within their core while they travel through the basin. The residence time of this bottom nepheloid layer appears to be less than a year. In-situ measurements of suspended particle size further indicate that the bottom nepheloid layer is primarily composed of aggregates between 100 and 1000 µm in diameter, probably constituted of fine silts. Bottom-reaching open ocean convection, as well as deep dense shelf water cascading that occurred concurrently some years, lead to recurring deep sediments resuspension episodes. They are key mechanisms that control the concentration and characteristics of the suspended particulate matter in the basin, and in turn affect the bathypelagic biological activity
Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2018
Ilker Fer; Anthony Bosse; Bruno Ferron; Pascale Bouruet-Aubertot
During winter 2012–2013, open‐ocean deep convection which is a major driver for the thermohaline circulation and ventilation of the ocean, occurred in the Gulf of Lions (Northwestern Mediterranean Sea) and has been thoroughly documented thanks in particular to the deployment of several gliders, Argo profiling floats, several dedicated ship cruises, and a mooring array during a period of about a year. Thanks to these intense observational efforts, we show that deep convection reached the bottom in winter early in February 2013 in a area of maximum 28 ± 3 109 m2. We present new quantitative results with estimates of heat and salt content at the subbasin scale at different time scales (on the seasonal scale to a 10 days basis) through optimal interpolation techniques, and robust estimates of the deep water formation rate of 2.0 ± 0.2 Sv. We provide an overview of the spatiotemporal coverage that has been reached throughout the seasons this year and we highlight some results based on data analysis and numerical modeling that are presented in this special issue. They concern key circulation features for the deep convection and the subsequent bloom such as Submesoscale Coherent Vortices (SCVs), the plumes, and symmetric instability at the edge of the deep convection area.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018
Anthony Bosse; Ilker Fer; Henrik Søiland; Rossby Thomas
In June 2013, a glider equipped with oxygen and fluorescence sensors has been used to extensively sample an anticyclonic Submesoscale Coherent Vortex (SCV) in the Ligurian Sea (NW Mediterranean Sea). Those measurements are complemented by full-depth CTD casts (T, S, and oxygen) and water samples documenting nutrients and phytoplankton pigments within the SCV and outside. The SCV has a very homogeneous core of oxygenated waters between 300 and 1200 m formed 4.5 months earlier during the winter deep convection event. It has a strong dynamical signature with peak velocities at 700 m depth of 13.9 cm s−1 in cyclogeostrophic balance. The eddy has a small radius of 6.2 km corresponding to high Rossby number of −0.45. The vorticity at the eddy center reaches −0.8f. Cross-stream isopycnic diffusion of tracers between the eddy core and the surroundings is found to be very limited due to dynamical barriers set by the SCV associated with a diffusivity coefficient of about 0.2 m2 s−1. The deep core is nutrients-depleted with concentrations of nitrate, phosphate, and silicate, 13–18% lower than the rich surrounding waters. However, the nutriclines are shifted of about 20–50 m toward the surface thus increasing the nutrients availability for phytoplankton. Chlorophyll-a concentrations at the deep chlorophyll maximum are subsequently about twice bigger as compared to outside. Pigments further reveal the predominance of nanophytoplankton inside the eddy and an enhancement of the primary productivity. This study demonstrates the important impact of postconvective SCVs on nutrients distribution and phytoplankton community, as well as on the subsequent primary production and carbon sequestration.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
X. Durrieu de Madron; Loïc Houpert; Pere Puig; Anna Sanchez-Vidal; Pierre Testor; Anthony Bosse; Claude Estournel; Samuel Somot; François Bourrin; Marie-Noëlle Bouin; M. Beauverger; Laurent Béguery; A. Calafat; Miquel Canals; Christophe Cassou; Laurent Coppola; Denis Dausse; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Jordi Font; Serge Heussner; S. Kunesch; D. Lefèvre; H. Le Goff; Jacobo Martín; Laurent Mortier; A. Palanques; Patrick Raimbault
Winter 2012–2013 was a particularly intense and well‐observed Dense Water Formation (DWF) event in the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea. In this study, we investigate the impact of the mesoscale dynamics on DWF. We perform two perturbed initial state simulation ensembles from summer 2012 to 2013, respectively, mesoscale‐permitting and mesoscale‐resolving, with the AGRIF refinement tool in the Mediterranean configuration NEMOMED12. The mean impact of the mesoscale on DWF occurs mainly through the high‐resolution physics and not the high‐resolution bathymetry. This impact is shown to be modest: the mesoscale does not modify the chronology of the deep convective winter nor the volume of dense waters formed. It however impacts the location of the mixed patch by reducing its extent to the west of the North Balearic Front and by increasing it along the Northern Current, in better agreement with observations. The maximum mixed patch volume is significantly reduced from 5.7 ± 0.2 to 4.2 ± 0.6 × 1013 m3</sup<. Finally, the spring restratification volume is more realistic and enhanced from 1.4 ± 0.2 to 1.8 ± 0.2 × 1013 m3 by the mesoscale. We also address the mesoscale impact on the ocean intrinsic variability by performing perturbed initial state ensemble simulations. The mesoscale enhances the intrinsic variability of the deep convection geography, with most of the mixed patch area impacted by intrinsic variability. The DWF volume has a low intrinsic variability but it is increased by 2–3 times with the mesoscale. We relate it to a dramatic increase of the Gulf of Lions eddy kinetic energy from 5.0 ± 0.6 to 17.3 ± 1.5 cm2/s2, in remarkable agreement with observations.