Residual sea surface height anomaly fields are obtained over
the North Atlantic Basin from TOPEX/Poseidon altimeter data.
Evidence of westward propagating anomalies characterized as
first-mode baroclinic Rossby waves is presented. The phase
speeds are obtained from the analysis of the autocorrelation
matrices of the residual surface height anomaly in three
dimensions, on a

grid. Periods
are calculated by least-square fitting a sinusoidal function
to the time series at each grid point. Zonal and meridional
wavelengths are obtained from the phase speed and period and
are least-square fit to the data as a consistency check.
Zonally averaged westward phase speeds vary between 1 and 27
km/day, between

and

, increasing
southward. Phase speeds are directed to the southwest north
of approximately

and to the northwest south of
this latitude. The sea surface height signal is divided
into two spectral bands, the first with periods between 280
and 450 days and the second with periods between 120 and 280
days. For the first band, the average of the periods taken
over the whole basin is 370 days. In the second band, a
signal of period between 6 and 7 months is evident also
throughout the basin. The zonally averaged zonal wavelengths
associated with the first band are in the range of 400 to
4600 km between

and

and for the
second band, 270 to 2500 km between

and

. Longer wavelengths are found close to the
southern boundaries. Shorter wavelengths are found in the
northern portion of the basin. Comparison with results from
numerical models suggests that the baroclinic waves observed
at mid-latitudes are generated at the eastern boundary by
fluctuations of the wind stress curl. Waves observed south
of

support the hypothesis of direct wind forcing.