Title: ESM 203: Ocean Processes and Circulation
1ESM 203 Ocean Processes and Circulation
- Jeff Dozier Thomas DunneFall 2007
2What is sea water?
- Sea water is 96½ pure water
- Remaining 3½ is other materials
- Dissolved salts, gases and organic substances, as
well as particles - Physical properties are mainly related to the
pure water, along with the dissolved salts - Water mass characteristics
- Salinity, temperature, nutrients, oxygen
- Key property (for circulation) is sea water
density - Variability in vertical inhibit or enhance
mixing - Variability in horizontal drive currents
3Sea water density
- A function salinity, pressure, and temperature
- Ranges from about 1020 to 1040 kg m3
- Oceanographers use the sigma-T description
4Temperature
- Temperature generally decreases with depth in the
ocean - Changes in temperature generally regulate changes
in density - except where ice is formed (which increases
salinity) - Rule of thumb
5Temperature in the Equatorial Pacific
Equatorial Pacific - WOCE150W
6Temperature in the Southern Ocean
60S - WOCE150W
7Salinity
- Ocean waters are salty
- The salts (Cl, SO42, Na, K, etc) are in
approximately constant proportions - Residence time is huge
- To practically estimate salinity, we measure just
one ion, Cl
8Salinity
- Salinity varies from 32 to 37 psu (practical
salinity units, parts per thousand) - Good water mass tracer
- Lower/higher values are unusual (river input,
high evaporation, sea ice formation) - Rule of thumb
9Pressure
- The weight of overlying sea water above a depth
causes pressure (hydrostatic equation) - Varies from 0 to gt500 bars (1 bar 105 N m2)
- Reference P0 at sea surface
- Rules of thumb
10Global sea surface temperature
11Global salinity
12Fluxes of water between surface and atmosphere
(slide from Planetary Hydrology lecture)
13Global salinity air-sea fluxes
14Convection the Conveyor Belt
- North Atlantic deep water (NADW) production
drives the conveyor
15Role of sea ice
- Formation of seasonal sea ice drives formation of
deep water - Salinity of sea ice is 2 to 5 psu (compared to
ocean 32 to 37 psu) - Brine is left over when sea ice is formed
- Source of Arctic and Antarctic bottom water
16Seasonal sea ice, Antarctic
17Wind-driven circulation at the surface
18(No Transcript)
19Major features of global wind field
- Ascending air leads to high precipitation (PgtE),
and lower salinity - Descending air leads to PltE, net evaporation, and
salinity
20Coriolis effect
21Effect of wind stress
- Drag on surface layers causes mixing into lower
layers
22Nansens Fram
- Nansen built the Fram to try to reach North Pole
(1893-1896) - Unique design to be locked in the ice and wait
- Once closer to Pole, Nansenone other dog team
set out to try to reach - (got to 8613N)
- http//www.arcticwebsite.com/ NansenFram.html
23Fram in the ice
24Ekman transport
- Nansen noticed that the movement of the
ice-locked Fram was 20-40 to the right of the
wind direction - Nansen deduced (correctly) that the direction was
caused by a balance of friction, wind stress, and
Coriolis forces - Ekman did the math
- Nansen later was instrumental in forming the
League of Nations and in repatriating World War I
refugees - Awarded Nobel Peace Prize in 1922
25Ekman transport
Motion is to right of the wind direction (in
Northern Hemisphere)
26Ekman spiral
- Top layers direction results from balance of
wind stress, friction, and Coriolis - Layer 2s direction results from balance of
stress from Layer 1, friction from Layer 3, and
Coriolis - Etc.
27(No Transcript)
28Ekman transport of column down to Ekman depth
(40-200m)
29Divergence convergence
- Divergence leads to upwelling
- Convergence leads to downwelling
30Ekman pumping
31Ekman pumping and gyre circulation, I
32Ekman pumping and gyre circulation, II
- Convergence of Ekman transport piles the water up
- Geostrophy pushes it around the circle
- Comparatively little water is moved by Ekman
transport (its the boundary layer) - But it causes the gyre circulation, which moves a
lot of water - Downwelling in gyre interior lowers nutrient
availability and algae biomass
33Gyre circulation, global scale
- Between Trade Winds Westerlies
- Convergence of Ekman transport
- Downwelling
- Subtropical gyres
- Between Westerlies and Polar Easterlies
- Divergence and upwelling
- Subarctic gyres
34Relationship between gyres and ocean
biogeochemistry
- Light drives photosynthesis
- CO2 is nearly always at saturation concentration
- Supply of nutrients is therefore critical
- Upwelling increases nutrients
35Ekman pumping and ocean biogeochemistry
- SeaWiFS mean chlorophyll concentration
- Low (blue) in center of subtropical gyres
- Driven by downwelling, which is caused by Ekman
pumping
36Coastal upwelling on California coast
- California Current, April 1978
- Sea surface temperature from NOAA AVHRR
- Chlorophyll from Coastal Zone Color Scanner
SST
Chl
37Global currents, driven by Ekman transport
38El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)
- Normal Trade Winds pile warm water in western
Pacific - Water surface elevation about ½ m higher at
Indonesia than Ecuador, surface temperature about
8C warmer than off South America, where water
(upwelling) is cold - El Niño Trade Winds relax, less upwelling,
therefore above-normal temperature off South
America - Fewer nutrients so fewer fish
- Often around Christmas, hence the name
- La Niña especially cold water off South America
- Southern Oscillation index air pressure anomaly
between Tahiti and Darwin - Negative (Tahiti Darwin) during El Niño
39http//www.elnino.noaa.gov/
40(No Transcript)