6,641 research outputs found
Deep water properties, velocities, and dynamics over ocean trenches
Observations of water properties and deep currents over several trenches in the Pacific Ocean central basins give consistent evidence for recent ventilation of water below the trench sills and cyclonic sense of circulation over the trenches. A dynamical argument for this pattern is advanced. First, a review of previous analyses of hydrographic data shows that the trenches are well ventilated by dense bottom water, that within the trenches this bottom water generally spreads away from its source, and that a cyclonic sense of circulation is suggested over some trenches. Then, this cyclonic sense of circulation over the trenches is further documented using deep current meter and float data. Finally, bathymetry is used to motivate a simple dynamical framework for flow over trenches. If the trench sides are sufficiently steep and the trench is sufficiently removed from the equator to ensure a region of closed geostrophic contours, then any upwelling over that region will drive a strong deep cyclonic recirculation in the weakly-stratified abyss through vortex stretching. The magnitude of this recirculation is limited by bottom drag. Ageostrophic flow in a bottom Ekman layer into the trench balances the water upwelled over the trench. The cyclonic recirculation is much stronger than the upwelling-driven flow predicted across blocked geostrophic contours by the linear planetary geostrophic balance
Near-equatorial deep circulation in the Indian and Pacific oceans
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 1990Theory and observations of deep circulation in the near-equatorial Atlantic,
Indian and Pacific Oceans are reviewed. Flow of deep and bottom water in the
near-equatorial Indian and Pacific oceans, the two oceans with only a southern
source of bottom water, is described through analysis of recent CTD data. Zero-velocity
surfaces are chosen through use of water-mass properties and transports are
estimated. Effects of basin geometry, bottom bathymetry and vertical diffusivity
as well as a model meridional inertial current on a sloping bottom near the equator
are all discussed in conjunction with the flow patterns inferred from observations.
In the western equatorial Indian Ocean, repeat CTD surveys in the Somali
Basin at the height of subsequent northeast and southwest monsoons show only
small differences in the strength of the circulation of the bottom water (potential
temperature θ â¤1.2°C). A deep western boundary current (DWBC) carrying about
4x106 m3 s-1 of this water is observed moving north along the continental rise of
Africa at 3°S. The cross-equatorial sections suggest that the current turns eastward
at the equator. The northern sections show a large mass of the coldest water
in the interior east of the Chain Ridge, augmenting the evidence that the DWBC
observed south of the equator turns east at the equator rather than remaining on the
boundary, and feeds the interior circulation in the northern part of the basin from
the equator. The circulation of deep water (1.2°C< θ ⤠1.7°C) in the Somali and
Arabian Basins is also analyzed. A DWBC flowing southward along the Carlsberg
ridge in the Arabian Basin is described.
In the central equatorial Pacific Ocean a recent zonal CTD section at 10°N,
allows estimation that 5.0x106 m3 s-1 of Lower Circumpolar Water (LCPW, θ â¤
1.2°C) moves northward as a DWBC along the Caroline Seamounts in the East
Mariana Basin. In the Central Pacific Basin, 8.1x106 m3 s-1 of LCPW is estimated
to move northward along the Marshal Seamounts as a DWBC at this latitude. An
estimated 4.7x106 m3 s-1 of the LCPW moves back southward across 10°N in the
Northeast Pacific Basin along the western flank of the East Pacific Rise and an
equatorial jet is observed to flow westward from 138°W to 148°W shifting south of
the Line Islands at 2.5°S, 159°W. The net northward flow of LCPW across 10°N
in the Pacific Ocean is estimated at 8.4x106 m3 s-I. The net southward flow of
the silica-rich North Pacific Deep Water (NPDW, 1.2 < θ ⤠2.0°C) in the central
Pacific Ocean estimated at 2.7x106 m3 s-1 is also discussed.
In the Indian Ocean, the eastward equatorial flow in the the bottom water of
the Somali Basin differs from the prediction of a flat-bottom uniform-upwelling
Stommel-Arons calculation with realistic basin geometry and source location. The
behavior of a uniform potential vorticity meridional jet on a sloping bottom is
examined in an attempt to explain the observed behavior at the equator. The
inertial jet does not cross the equator in a physically plausible fashion owing to
the constraint of conservation of potential vorticity. Mass and heat budgets for
the bottom water of the Somali Basin are of interest with respect to the equatorial
feature. Upwelling through the θ = 1.2°C surface is estimated at 12¹4x10-5 cm s-1
and a rough heat budget for the deep Somali Basin results in an estimate of vertical
diffusivity of 9Âą5 cm2 s-1 at 3800 m. Numerical model results indicate that large
vertical diffusivities result in eastward jets in the bottom water at the equator.
In the Pacific Ocean the DWBC observed flowing northward south of the equator
crosses the equator with transport nearly intact, albeit split into two at 10°N by
the tortuous bathymetry. However the southward flow along the East Pacific Rise
in the Northeast Pacific Basin and the westward equatorial jet this flow feeds are
puzzling. The basin depth decreases equatorward and eastward, which may allow
some southeastward flow in the Stommel-Arons framework. However, the equatorial
jet is still unexplained. The estimated vertical velocity and diffusivity at 3600 db
of 2¹2x10-5 cm s-1 and 4¹3 cm2 s-1 for the area between 12°8 and 10°N are much
smaller than estimates in the Somali Basin.
Thus the two oceans, similar in their single southern source of bottom water,
have DWBC's which behave remarkably differently near the equator. In the Somali
Basin of the Indian Ocean the DWBC appears to turn eastward at the equator,
with large vertical upwelling velocity and large vertical diffusivity estimates for the
bottom water of the basin. In the Pacific Ocean the DWBC appears to cross the
equator, but there is a puzzling westward flowing equatorial jet in the bottom water
of the Northeast Pacific Basin.The author began this research in the M.I.T.-W.H.O.I Joint Program while
supported by the U. S. Offce of Naval Research through a Secretary of the Navy
Graduate Fellowship in Oceanography. Support for collection and analysis of the
data taken during R.R.S. Charles Darwin cruises 86-19 and 87-25 was provided by
the U. S. National Science Foundation under grants OCE8800135 and OCE8513825
to D. B. Olson at the University of Miami and by the U. S. Offce of Naval Research
under contract N00014-87-K-0001, NR083-004 and grant N00014-89-J-1076 to B.
A. Warren at W.H.O.I. Collection of data taken during R.Y. Moana Wave cruise 89-
3 was supp6rted by the U. S. National Science Foundation under grant OCE881691O
to H. L. Bryden and J. M. Toole at W.H.O.I. Collection of data taken during
the U.S.-P.R.C. Toga cruises was supported by N.O.A.A. under grant NA85AA-DACU7
Multidecadal Warming and Shoaling of Antarctic Intermediate Water
Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) is a dominant Southern Hemisphere water mass that spreads from its formation regions just north of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) to at least 20°S in all oceans. This study uses an isopycnal climatology constructed from Argo conductivityâtemperatureâdepth (CTD) profile data to define the current state of the AAIW salinity minimum (its core) and thence compute anomalies of AAIW core pressure, potential temperature, salinity, and potential density since the mid-1970s from ship-based CTD profiles. The results are used to calculate maps of temporal property trends at the AAIW core, where statistically significant strong circumpolar shoaling (30â50 dbar decadeâ1), warming (0.05°â0.15°C decadeâ1), and density reductions [up to â0.03 (kg mâ3) decadeâ1] are found. These trends are strongest just north of the ACC in the southeast Pacific and Atlantic Oceans and decrease equatorward. Salinity trends are generally small, with their sign varying regionally. Bottle data are used to extend the AAIW core potential temperature anomaly analysis back to 1925 in the Atlantic and to ~1960 elsewhere. The modern warm AAIW core conditions appear largely unprecedented in the historical record: biennially and zonally binned median AAIW core potential temperatures within each ocean basin are, with the notable exception of the subtropical South Atlantic in the 1950sâ70s, 0.2â1°C colder than modern values. Zonally averaged sea surface temperature anomalies around the AAIW formation latitudes in each ocean and sectoral southern annular mode indices are used to put the AAIW core property trends and variations into context
Basin-Wavelength Equatorial Deep Jet Signals across Three Oceans
Equatorial deep jets (EDJs) are equatorially trapped, stacked, zonal currents that reverse direction every few hundred meters in depth throughout much of the water column. This study evaluates their structure observationally in all three oceans using new high-vertical-resolution Argo float conductivityâtemperatureâdepth (CTD) instrument profiles from 2010 to 2014 augmented with historical shipboard CTD data from 1972 to 2014 and lower-vertical-resolution Argo float profiles from 2007 to 2014. The vertical strain of density is calculated from the profiles and analyzed in a stretched vertical coordinate system determined from the mean vertical density structure. The power spectra of vertical strain in each basin are analyzed using wavelet decomposition. In the Indian and Pacific Oceans, there are two distinct peaks in the power spectra, one Kelvin waveâlike and the other entirely consistent with the dispersion relation of a linear, first meridional mode, equatorial Rossby wave. In the Atlantic Ocean, the first meridional mode Rossby wave signature is very strong and dominates. In all three ocean basins, Rossby waveâlike signatures are coherent across the basin width and appear to have wavelengths the scale of the basin width, with periods of about 5 yr in the Indian and Atlantic Oceans and about 12 yr in the Pacific Ocean. Their observed meridional scales are about 1.5 times the linear theoretical values. Their phase propagation is downward with time, implying upward energy propagation if linear wave dynamics hold
Correction to âRecent western South Atlantic bottom water warmingâ
Author Posting. Š American Geophysical Union, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Research Letters 33 (2006): L21604, doi:10.1029/2006GL028294
Recent interannual upper ocean variability in the deep southeastern Bering Sea
Recent seasonal and interannual variability of the upper ocean in the southeast Aleutian Basin of the Bering Sea is related to air sea fluxes, ocean advection, and mixing. Between the winter of 2001/2002 and that of 2002/2003 a warming and freshening of the upper ocean was observed in data from a regional array of profiling Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD) floats. The mild winter of 2002/2003 resulted in an unusually warm, fresh, light, and shallow winter mixed layer and a weakly ventilated temperature minimum layer. These unusual winter conditions contributed to a substantial reduction in the subsurface temperature inversion characteristic of the southeast Aleutian Basin. Heat budget analysis, one-dimensional upper ocean model runs, and altimeter sea-surface height anomalies suggest that a combination of atypical ocean advection and anomalous atmospheric forcing contributed to the unusual upper ocean conditions in 2002/2003. The observed warming and disappearance of the temperature minimum in 2002/2003 appears to have preconditioned the water column toward a similar structure in 2003/2004, despite a return to more normal atmospheric forcing
OPTIMAL IRRIGATION PIVOT LOCATION ON IRREGULARLY SHAPED FIELDS
Although annual rainfall in the Southeast is adequate, its distribution is a potential constraint to agricultural production. Farmers require production information concerning efficient use of irrigation technology adapted to regional growing conditions. Selection of optimal position, size, and number of pivots in center pivot irrigation systems poses special problems on small, irregularly shaped fields. In the southeastern United States, field size and shape are often varied and irregular. A mixed integer programming model was constructed to assist in irrigation investment decisions. The model is illustrated using irrigated peanut production in southeast Alabama. Results indicate the importance of economic engineering considerations.Farm Management,
Relative contributions of temperature and salinity to seasonal mixed layer density changes and horizontal density gradients
Temperature and salinity both contribute to ocean density, including its seasonal cycle and spatial patterns in the mixed layer. Temperature and salinity profiles from the Argo Program allow construction and analysis of a global, monthly, mixed layer climatology. Temperature changes dominate the seasonal cycle of mixed layer density in most regions, but salinity changes are dominant in the tropical warm pools, Arctic, and Antarctic. Under the Intertropical Convergence Zone, temperature and salinity work in concert to increase seasonal stratification, but the seasonal density changes there are weak because the temperature and salinity changes are small. In the eastern subtropics, seasonal salinity changes partly compensate those in temperature and reduce seasonal mixed layer density changes. Besides a hemispheric seasonal reversal, the times of maximum and minimum mixed layer density exhibit regional variations. For instance, the equatorial region is more closely aligned with Southern Hemisphere timing, and much of the North Indian Ocean has a minimum density in May and June. Outside of the tropics, the maximum mixed layer density occurs later in the winter toward the poles, and the minimum earlier in the summer. Finally, at the times of maximum mixed layer density, some of the ocean has horizontal temperature and salinity gradients that work against each other to reduce the horizontal density gradient. However, on the equatorial sides of the subtropical salinity maxima, temperature and salinity gradients reinforce each other, increasing the density gradients there. Density gradients are generally stronger where either salinity or temperature gradients are dominant influences
MIMOC: A global monthly isopycnal upper-ocean climatology with mixed layers
A monthly, isopycnal/mixed-layer ocean climatology (MIMOC), global from 0 to 1950âdbar, is compared with other monthly ocean climatologies. All available quality-controlled profiles of temperature (T) and salinity (S) versus pressure (P) collected by conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) instruments from the Argo Program, Ice-Tethered Profilers, and archived in the World Ocean Database are used. MIMOC provides maps of mixed layer properties (conservative temperature, Î, absolute salinity, SA, and maximum P) as well as maps of interior ocean properties (Î, SA, and P) to 1950âdbar on isopycnal surfaces. A third product merges the two onto a pressure grid spanning the upper 1950âdbar, adding more familiar potential temperature (θ) and practical salinity (S) maps. All maps are at monthly 0.5°âĂâ0.5° resolution, spanning from 80°S to 90°N. Objective mapping routines used and described here incorporate an isobath-following component using a âFast Marchingâ algorithm, as well as front-sharpening components in both the mixed layer and on interior isopycnals. Recent data are emphasized in the mapping. The goal is to compute a climatology that looks as much as possible like synoptic surveys sampled circa 2007â2011 during all phases of the seasonal cycle, minimizing transient eddy and wave signatures. MIMOC preserves a surface mixed layer, minimizes both diapycnal and isopycnal smoothing of θ-S, as well as preserves density structure in the vertical (pycnoclines and pycnostads) and the horizontal (fronts and their associated currents). It is statically stable and resolves water mass features, fronts, and currents with a high level of detail and fidelity
An equatorial ocean bottleneck in global climate models
Author Posting. Š American Meteorological Society, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Climate 25 (2012): 343â349, doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-11-00059.1.The Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC) is a major component of the tropical Pacific Ocean circulation. EUC velocity in most global climate models is sluggish relative to observations. Insufficient ocean resolution slows the EUC in the eastern Pacific where nonlinear terms should dominate the zonal momentum balance. A slow EUC in the east creates a bottleneck for the EUC to the west. However, this bottleneck does not impair other major components of the tropical circulation, including upwelling and poleward transport. In most models, upwelling velocity and poleward transport divergence fall within directly estimated uncertainties. Both of these transports play a critical role in a theory for how the tropical Pacific may change under increased radiative forcing, that is, the ocean dynamical thermostat mechanism. These findings suggest that, in the mean, global climate models may not underrepresent the role of equatorial ocean circulation, nor perhaps bias the balance between competing mechanisms for how the tropical Pacific might change in the future. Implications for model improvement under higher resolution are also discussed.KBK gratefully acknowledges the J. Lamar
Worzel Assistant Scientist Fund. GCJ is supported by
NOAAâs Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research. RM gratefully acknowledges the generous support
and hospitality of the Divecha Centre for Climate
Change and CAOS at IISc, Bangalore, and partial support
by NASA PO grants.2012-07-0
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