Carrying high concentrations of dissolved salt, ocean water is
a good electrical conductor. As seawater flows through the Earth's
ambient geomagnetic field, electric fields are generated, which in
turn induce secondary magnetic fields. In current models for ocean-induced magnetic fields, a realistic consideration of seawater
conductivity is often neglected and the effect on the variability of
the ocean-induced magnetic field unknown. To model magnetic fields
that are induced by non-tidal global ocean currents, an
electromagnetic induction model is implemented into the Ocean Model
for Circulation and Tides (OMCT). This provides the opportunity to
not only model ocean-induced magnetic signals but also to assess the
impact of oceanographic phenomena on the induction process. In this
paper, the sensitivity of the induction process due to spatial and
temporal variations in seawater conductivity is investigated. It is
shown that assuming an ocean-wide uniform conductivity is
insufficient to accurately capture the temporal variability of the
magnetic signal. Using instead a realistic global seawater
conductivity distribution increases the temporal variability of the
magnetic field up to 45 %. Especially vertical gradients in
seawater conductivity prove to be a key factor for the variability
of the ocean-induced magnetic field. However, temporal variations
of seawater conductivity only marginally affect the magnetic
signal
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