Thermohaline circulation _Water mass in deep ocean ●The concept of meridional overturning ●Deep water formation and property Antarctic Bottom Water North.

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Presentation transcript:

Thermohaline circulation _Water mass in deep ocean ●The concept of meridional overturning ●Deep water formation and property Antarctic Bottom Water North Atlantic Deep Water Antarctic Intermediate Water ●Abyssal circulation: Stommel-Arons model

Upper and Deep Ocean 1). The base of thermocline at a depth of roughly 1 km represents the lower boundary of the domain of the vigorous ocean circulation driven by the wind stress and large-scale distribution of heating and cooling (~upper ocean) 2). Below this region lies a vast volume of water (from 1~2 to 4~5 km, ~deep or abyssal ocean) 3). The deep ocean is cold everywhere T < 4 o C almost everywhere below 2km T typically falls within 0-2 o C at 4km In contrast to widespread area of SST of the order of 20 o C

Why is the deep ocean cold? No major heat source or sink within deep ocean Waters of such low temperatures can only be matched with surface waters at both polar regions (estimated filling rate:10-20 Sv) The presence at lower latitudes of such waters implies a large-scale deep circulation, the abyssal circulation

Deep Water Masses Waters filled in different deep ocean basins have distinct characters

Interesting facts The vertical distribution of T & S in the central Atlantic is similar to the north-south distribution of T & S at the surface. Almost all isopycnals come in contact with the atmosphere somewhere on the globe The process whereby ocean surface characteristics are transmitted to deeper layers is known as ventilation.

Water masses and water types Water mass can be defined as a body of water with a common formation history Water mass can be identified by plotting temperature against salinity in a T-S diagram Points in the T-S diagram are called water types Water sources definition are called source water types

How to track the water masses? temperature-salinity diagram Below the surface layer in permanent contact with the atmosphere, temperature and salinity are quasi- conservative properties, i.e., they can only be changed by mixing and advection. All other properties of sea water such as oxygen, nutrients etc. are affected by biological and chemical processes and therefore non- conservative. Water masses can therefore be identified by their temperature-salinity (T-S) combinations.

Identify water masses from T-S Diagram

One of the oldest methods of classification is the temperature-salinity diagram (or T-S diagram). In any given area, a plot of temperature versus salinity data, from near the surface to the bottom, has distinctive and reproducible characteristics (excluding the top 100m, where seasonal temperature changes dominate). All data from a given region of the ocean can be expected to fall within a certain envelope, with greater variation near surface than at depth. Inspection of the shape of the curve allows one to distinguish between water masses.

Examples of temperature-salinity (TS)-diagrams. The diagrams on the left show the distribution of temperature (red) and salinity (cyan) with depth; the diagrams on the right show the corresponding TS-diagrams. Top: layering of a warm and saline water mass found at m depth above a cold and fresh water mass found at m. The full lines show the situation before mixing, the broken lines after mixing. The TS-diagram shows the two water masses as TS points. Before mixing only the two points are seen in the TS- diagram. Mixing connects the two TS-points by a straight line. Bottom: layering of three water masses (intrusion of a low salinity water mass at m depth). Again, the full lines show the situation before mixing, the broken lines after mixing. The TS- diagram shows two mixing lines; the erosion of the intermediate salinity minimum by mixing is seen by the departure of the broken curve from the original water mass point.

The Concept of Thermohaline Circulation Water renewal in deep ocean is mainly achieved by currents which are driven by density differences produced by temperature (thermal) and salinity (haline) effects. The associated circulation is therefore referred to as the thermohaline circulation. Since these movements are probably weak, it is often impractical to use current meters to measure them directly; they are usually deduced from the distribution of water properties and the application of geostrophy.

Heating at low latitudes Surface heat at the equator and cooling at higher latitudes generate meridional density difference that drives a overturning cell The overturning circulation is weak because the heat is in the shallow mixed layer The salinity effect (e.g., evaporation at subtropics and precipitation near the equator) enhances the tropical-subtropical thermal cell but counters the cooling in the higher latitudes with freshening The upper thermohaline cell is of secondary importance

Cooling at high latitudes Net heat loss from the oceans at high latitudes Cooling of the surface water and increase in density Sink and replace deeper water Density can also be increased when ice freezes out, ejecting salt and thus increasing the weight of the remaining water Thermohaline circulation of the ocean originates from sinking to mid-depth or even to the ocean bottom, followed by horizontal flow.

Water mass formation by deep convection Deep convection occurs in regions of weak density stratification (mostly in polar and subpolar regions). When the water in the mixed layer gets denser than the water below, it sinks to great depth, in some regions reaching to the ocean floor. The density increase can be achieved by cooling or an increase in salinity (either through evaporation or through brine concentration during freezing) or both.

Sea Ice Covers 6-8% of ocean High reflectivity (Albedo 30-40%) (A barrier to solar radiation) Always colder than underline water (heat flux from ocean to the ice)

Halocline A layer of rapidly changing salinity at about meters in high latitudes of ice covered regions The cooling temperature mostly freezes fresh water into ice crystals, leaving salt trapped in brine pocket The unfrozen water sink and mix with sea water below

Track of Antarctic Bottom Water and North Atlantic Deep Water

Near Boundery Sinking 1). Dense water forms over the continental shelf, due to surface cooling and salt rejection during ice formation. The resulting convection yields cold, salty water at the depth on the shelf 2). Horizontal density gradient parallel to the coast produces local circulations for the resevior to empty 3). Mixing with an off- shore water mass increases the density (cabbeling) 4). Dense, salty water on the shelf desends the slope under a balance of Coriolis, gravity, and frictional forces. The thermobaric effect may also contribute to the sinking

Sources of Antarctic Bottom Water Sinking around Antarctica The bottom water originates in several areas of the Antarctic continental shelf, where water is made sufficiently cold and saline that, in flowing down the continental slope and mixing with the surrounding deep water, it is dense enough to reach the floor of the ocean. In order of decreasing amount and extent of influence on the deep water property distributions—and presumably, therefore, of rate of bottom water production—these regions are the Weddell Sea, the Ross Sea, and the Adélie Coast; perhaps there is some production off Enderby Land, too.

Weddell Sea The deep water is formed at the continental shelf, which then flow into the Weddell Sea (-2 o C, S=34.4~34.8,  t =27.96) The shelf water mixes rapidly into the water above to form the Weddell Sea Bottom Water (  = –0.7 o ~ –0.8 o C,  t =27.9). It is estimated that the net flow out of the Weddell Sea is about 16 x 10 6 m 3 /s. The Weddell Sea Bottom Water is very cold but fresher than the overlaying water (S~34.52).

Observations made in 1968 on a station line running eastward from Antarctic Peninsula into Weddell Sea.

Similar sections near 40 o W, 29 o W, 10 o W-20 o W show that the down slope flow gradually diminishes to the eastward. Potential temperature Salinity  Dissolved silica concentration  Observations made in 1968 on a station line running eastward from Antarctic Peninsula show a 200-m thick layer of relatively cold, fresh, low-silica bottom water on the slope, extending onto the floor of the Weddell Sea. The evidence points to a flow of shelf water down the slope, entraining and being diluted by the surrounding water on its way. (The continental shelf is unreachable throughout a year because of ice cover).

The distribution of bottom potential temperature in the Weddell Sea demonstrates that the newly formed bottom water leaves the continental slope mainly at the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, near 63 o -65 o S. At the edge of the continental shelf, the water has  = –1.2 to –1.4 o C the rate of sinking is 2-5x10 6 m 3 /s.

Other Sources of the Bottom Water Ross Sea More saline and denser water (S>34.72,  t =28.1 ) are found near the bottom of ocean in the southwestern Pacific, north of the Ross Sea near the mid-ocean ridge (about 65 o S), and close to Antarctica south of Australia. This high salinity bottom water can be traced back to the deep depressions on the shelf of Ross Sea. The cold saline shelf water has been observed to descend the western continental slope in a manner similar to that of the down slope flow in the Weddell Sea. The off shelf flux is roughly 0.6 x 10 6 m3/s Adélie Coast Deep depressions of much smaller area on the continental shelf of the Adélie Coast of Antarctica. They are filled below their sill depths with water temperature close to the freezing point, and of salinity 34.4—34.7, probably as a result of deep convection associated with winter sea-ice formation. Such water spilling over the sills forms a layer a few tens of meters thick on the near-by continental slope, underlying the high salinity bottom water from the Ross Sea. The flow down the continental slope appears intermittent. This low-salinity bottom water mixes into the Ross Sea water rapidly enough that it has not been detected far from the continental rise near its point of origin. Enderby Land Small amount of bottom water production.

Antarctic Bottom Water Bottom water from these several sources mixes with the warmer, more saline water above (the Antarctic Circumpolar Water) to form the “Antarctic Bottom Water” of the world ocean. Wedell and Ross Seas. (  t =27.96, T=0.3 o C, S= at sub-Antarctic zone o S). The Antarctic Bottom Water is the coldest, and the densest, deep water in the open ocean, detectable into northern latitudes by low temperatures close to the bottom. The Antarctic Bottom Water flows into the South Atlantic and eastward through the Indian and Pacific sectors of the Southern Ocean. Below 4000m depth, all Atlantic Ocean basins are mainly occupied by the Antarctic Bottom Water.

Passages of AABW The path of Antarctic Bottom Water is strongly affected by the topography. The water mass spreads northward from both east and west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. On the western side, it is detectable well into the northern hemisphere past 50 o N. On the eastern side, the water flows along the Walvis Ridge (20 o S-30 o S). Since the basin is closed in the north below the 3000m level at the Walvis Ridge, its northward progress comes to a halt there. The flow follows the depth contours in cyclonic motion, and the bottom water leaves the basin on the eastern side toward s the Indian Ocean. Antarctic Bottom Water enters the eastern basins north of the Walvis Ridge near the equator by passing the Romanche Fracture Zone. As a result, potential temperature increases slowly both northward and southward from the equator in the eastern basins.

The effect of bottom topography on AABW