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Latitude structure of the circulation Figure 2.12 Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP.

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Presentation on theme: "Latitude structure of the circulation Figure 2.12 Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP."— Presentation transcript:

1 Latitude structure of the circulation Figure 2.12 Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

2 Latitude structure of the circulation Figure 2.12 Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

3  Hadley cell: thermally driven, overturning circulation, rising in the tropics and sinking at slightly higher latitudes (the subtropics). transports heat poleward (to roughly 30  N). rising branch assoc. with convective heating and heavy rainfall. subtropical descent regions: warm at upper levels  hard to convect, little rain. Latitude structure of the circulation (cont.) Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

4  In midlatitudes, the average effect of the transient weather disturbances transports heat poleward.  Trade winds in the tropics blow westward (i.e., from east, so known as easterlies). they converge into the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), i.e., the tropical convective zone. Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP Latitude structure of the circulation (cont.)

5  At midlatitudes surface winds are westerly (from the west).  Momentum transport in Hadley cell and midlatitude transients important to wind patterns. Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP Latitude structure of the circulation (cont.)

6 Ocean surface currents Figure 2.17 Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

7  Along the Equator, currents are in direction of the wind (easterly winds drive westward currents [note terminology!]  Off the Equator, currents need not be in the direction of the wind. Currents set by change of the zonal wind with latitude and Coriolis force (chap. 3). (“zonal" = east-west direction) Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP Ocean surface currents (cont.)

8  Just slightly off the Equator, small component of the current moves poleward; important because it diverges  produces upwelling (chap. 3).  Circulation systems known as gyres. In the subtropical gyres, currents flow slowly equatorward in most of basin. Compensating return flow toward poles occurs in narrow, fast western boundary currents (Gulf stream, the Kuroshio, Brazil currents). Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

9 Ocean vertical structure Figure 2.18  Ocean surface is warmed from above  lighter water over denser water (“ stable stratification”). incoming solar radiation warms upper 10 m. Turbulence near the surface mixes some of this warming downward. mixing driven by wind- generated turbulence and instabilities of surface currents. Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

10 Ocean vertical structure (cont.) Figure 2.18  At thermocline, any mixing of the denser fluid below into lighter fluid above requires work  limits the mixing.  Deep waters tend to remain cold on long time scales, import of cold waters from a few sinking regions near the poles maintains cold temperatures. Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

11 Ocean vertical structure (cont.) Figure 2.18  Ocean surface is directly warmed by solar radiation  loses heat to atmosphere. air temperature a few meters above the surface tends to be slightly colder than the surface temperature. Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

12 The thermohaline circulation Figure 2.19  Salinity (concentration of salt) affects ocean density in addition to temperature.  Waters dense enough to sink: cold and salty  Thermohaline circulation: deep overturning circulation is termed the (thermal for the temperature, haline from the greek word for salt, hals). Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP

13 The thermohaline circulation (cont.) Figure 2.19  Deep water formation in a few small regions that produce densest water e.g., off Greenland, Labrador Sea, regions around Antarctica.  Small regions control temperature of deep ocean  potential sensitivity. likely player in past climate variations. Neelin, 2011. Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge UP


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