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Summary from last class… Importance of large-scale ocean circulation –climate, biogeochemistry, marine resources Characteristic “Types” of Ocean Circulation –Patterns of circulation can be generalized for different regions –Suggests that dynamical processes are the same –Wind-driven, Buoyancy-driven & Coastal Scales - “spit on a basketball”
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Sea Water Properties Water mass characteristics –Salinity, temperature, nutrients, oxygen Key property is seawater density –Changes in vertical - inhibit mixing –Changes in horizontal - drive currents –See Lecture 3 of Tomzcak’s web course gyre.umeoce.maine.edu/physicalocean/Tomczak/IntroOc/lecture03.html
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What is Seawater? Seawater is 96.5% pure water About 3.5% is other materials dissolved salts, gases & organic substances as well as particles Physical properties are mainly determined by pure water
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A Water Molecule Water is a non-polar molecule Weak hydrogen bonding
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Consequences of Water’s Hydrogen Bonding Water forms a lattice or aggregation of many molecules (polywater)
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Consequences of Water’s Hydrogen Bonding High specific heat (break the lattice!!) High latent heat for phase changes Great solvent
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Consequences of Water’s Hydrogen Bonding Ice crystals take up more space than liquid water Ice Floats!! (rare for liquids) –Maximum density is water at 4C Critical for freshwater systems
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More about ice... Seasonal turnover in lakes –As lakes cool they reach temperature of maximum density (4C) & overturn –Later ice forms at the surface, sheltering the interior from winter conditions –This allows fish over winter under the ice
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More on Hydrogen Bonding
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Back to Oceans... Density of seawater is controlled by –temperature –salinity (dissolved salt content) –pressure (related to depth) Equation of state = f(S,T,p) = [kg m -3 ] (S,T,p=0) range from 1020 to 1030 kg m -3
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Temperature Temperature generally decreases with depth in the ocean Except where ice is formed, temperature changes primarily regulate density Rule of thumb = +1 kg m -3 for T = -5 C
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Temperature Equatorial Pacific - WOCE150W
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Temperature 60S - WOCE150W
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Pacific Temperature eWOCE gallery – www.ewoce.org
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Salinity Ocean waters are “salty” Salinity ~ [mass “salts”]/[mass seawater] The “salts” (Cl -, SO 4 -2, Na +, K +, etc.) are in approximate constant proportion –Law of salinity (residence time is huge) –Measure one ion [Cl - ] - estimate salinity
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Salinity Salinity is measured electrically now Units are “practical salinity units” (psu) Often bottles are used
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Salinity Salinity varies from 32 to 37 psu Atlantic is saltier than the Pacific… –Why?? Good water mass tracer Lower/higher values are unusual (riverine, huge evaporation, etc.)
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Typical T & S Profiles Features Mixed layer Thermocline Halocline
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Pacific Salinities eWOCE gallery – www.ewoce.org
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Atlantic Salinity
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Ocean Distribution of & S Mean ocean ~ 4 C & S ~ 34.8 psu
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Pressure Pressure is due to the weight of sea water lying above a depth (hydrostatic) Pressure varies from 0 to >5000 db p = 0 is atmospheric pressure Note: 1 db pressure ~ 1 m depth
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Potential Temperature Hydrostatic pressure will heat a water parcel as descends within the ocean Adiabatic lapse rate is ~0.0001 C/m A surface parcel (T=0 & S=35) will heat ~0.3C if moved to 3000 m depth Defines potential temperature or
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Potential Temperature
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World Ocean Atlas 1994 Global SST
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Annual Change in SST
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January July Net Air-Sea Heat Fluxes Red = Heat In Blue = Heat Out
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Interannual SST Changes March 1998 relative to average March
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World Ocean Atlas 1994 Global Salinity
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Global Salinity & Air-Sea Fluxes
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Global Salinity
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1 Sverdrup = 10 6 m 3 s -1 Why is the Atlantic so salty?
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Seawater Density Equation of state = f(S,T,p) = [kg m -3 ] (S,T,p=0) range from 1020 to 1040 kg m -3 Shorthand sigma-t: t = (S,T,0) - 1000 t (S,T) ranges from 20 to 40 –Similarly, sigma-theta: = (S, ,0) - 1000
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Seawater Density Density of seawater is controlled by Temperature, salinity & pressure – = f(S,T,p) Rule of Thumb => = +1 kg m -3 IF S = +1 psu OR T = -5C OR p = +100 db
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T-S Diagram (full range) Max density Freezing Values of t
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T-S Diagram (typical range)
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Density Calculator http://www.phys.ocean.dal.ca/~kelley/seawater/WaterProperties.html http://gyre.umeoce.maine.edu/physicalocean/Tomczak/Utilities/index.html
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Review Fundamental seawater properties –Salinity, temperature & pressure Density is the important variable –in situ density (S,T,p) –Sigma-t (S,T,0) – 1000 –Sigma- (S, ,0) – 1000
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Review Rules of thumb -> = +1 kg m -3 T = -5C, S = 1 psu or p = 100 db Global surface T & S driven largely by air- sea exchanges Dense water sinks… now we're talking dynamics
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