Browsing by Subject "Meridional Overturning Circulation"
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Item Open Access Exploring the Lower Limb of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation(2018) Zou, SijiaThe Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is characterized as a northward upper limb that carries warm near-surface waters from southern latitudes to the subpolar North Atlantic, and a southward lower limb that transports cold deep waters back to the southern latitudes. Due to its special role in distributing heat, carbon and water masses globally, AMOC as an essential part in the climate system, has long been a strong focus within the ocean community. For decades, AMOC variability has been attributed to changes in deep water production at high latitudes in the North Atlantic through a geostrophic response in the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC), the assumed major export pathway of the deep waters. However, recent Lagrangian studies have revealed the importance of eddy-driven interior pathways, challenging the traditional DWBC-dominated spreading pattern, hence the linkage between deep water formation and AMOC. Under the new spreading scheme of the deep waters, this dissertation provides an extended Lagrangian analysis on the spreading pathways of two major deep waters, Labrador Sea Water (LSW) and Iceland Scotland Overflow Water (ISOW), and re-examines the relationships among deep water production, deep water export and the strength of AMOC.
A Lagrangian simulation of newly-formed LSW in an ocean/sea ice model (1/4°) reveals strong recirculation of the water mass in the subpolar gyre, with a small portion exported to the subtropical gyre through an advective-diffusive pathway. Furthermore, no significant correlation between LSW production and its Lagrangian export to the subtropical gyre is found on interannual to decadal time scales, suggesting a negligible or at best modest impact of LSW production on the subtropical AMOC.
In a combined Lagrangian and Eulerian frame, a first comprehensive description of ISOW spreading branches in the eastern North Atlantic is presented with observational data and output from an eddy-resolving ocean model. The major export pathway for ISOW is shown to be the southward branch into the Western European Basin, instead of the branch through the Charlie Gibbs Fracture Zone, the traditional DWBC pathway. Interestingly, these two branches show compensating relationships in the model, a result assumed to reflect these pathways’ interactions with the North Atlantic Current in magnitude and/or position shift.
Finally, with output from ocean circulation models and an ocean reanalysis dataset, the meridional connection of the deep water transport anomalies and their relationships with AMOC are assessed. It is shown that deep water transport anomalies in the subpolar gyre do not propagate coherently to the subtropical gyre in general, particularly so for Upper North Atlantic Deep Water (UNADW, containing LSW). Furthermore, while UNADW and Lower North Atlantic Deep Water (LNADW, containing overflow waters) transports in the subpolar gyre are linked to local AMOC strength on interannual to decadal time scales, in the subtropical gyre only LNADW transport variability shows this linkage, the latter results consistent with observations. These analyses suggest a dominance of gyre-specific, rather than basin-wide, mechanisms for water mass transport variability. Thus, latitudinal coherence in AMOC is likely unrelated to continuity in water mass transport anomalies. An exception to this generalization is possible with strong LNADW transport events.
Taken together, this dissertation emphasizes the importance of interior pathways to the export of deep waters from the subpolar to the subtropical gyre. It also reveals a tenuous linkage between deep water production and AMOC strength at subtropical latitudes on interannual to decadal time scales.
Item Open Access On the Horizontal Advection and Biogeochemical Impacts of North Atlantic Mode Waters and Boundary Currents(2007-07-26) Palter, Jaime BethUsing a combination of hydrographic data and the trajectories and profiles of isobaric floats, this dissertation evaluates the connections between remote regions in the North Atlantic. First, I establish that the production and advection of the North Atlantic Subtropical Mode Water (STMW) introduces spatial and temporal variability in the subsurface nutrient reservoir of the subtropical gyre. As the mode water is formed, its nutrients are depleted by biological utilization. When the depleted water mass is exported to the gyre, it injects a wedge of low-nutrient water into the upper layers of the ocean. Contrary to intuition, cold winters that promote deep convective mixing and vigorous mode water formation may diminish downstream primary productivity by altering the subsurface delivery of nutrients. Next, the source of elevated nutrient concentrations in the Gulf Stream is assessed. The historical hydrographic data suggest that imported water advected into the Gulf Stream via the tropics supplies an important source of nutrients to the Gulf Stream. Because the high nutrients are likely imported from the tropics, diapycnal mixing need not be invoked to explain the Gulf Stream's high nutrient concentrations, as had been previously hypothesized. Furthermore, nutrients do not increase along the length of the Stream, as would be expected with strong diapycnal mixing.Finally, profiling float data are used to investigate how the Labrador Sea Water enters the Deep Western Boundary Current, one of the primary pathways by which it exits the subpolar gyre. With the trajectories and profiles of an extensive array of P-ALACE floats I evaluate three processes for their role in the entry of Labrador Sea Water in the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC): 1) LSW is formed directly in the DWBC, 2) Eddies flux LSW laterally from the interior Labrador Sea to the DWBC, and 3) A horizontally divergent mean flow advects LSW from the interior to the DWBC. Each of the three processes has the potential to remove heat from the boundary current, and both the formation of LSW directly in the boundary current and the eddy heat flux are possible sources of interannual variability in the exported LSW product.