Title: and their Role in the Earth Climate
1THE SOUTHERN OCEAN CIRCULATION PROCESSES,
DYNAMICS AND MODELS
Dirk Olbers Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar
and Marine Research Germany
thanks C.Eden, R. Greatbatch, M. Visbeck, K.
Lettmann, R. Timmermann
2SO circulation
circumpolar circulation the ACC
meridional circulation the SO overturning
3Outline
what drives the quasi-zonal circulation of
the ACC? how to interpret eddy fluxes? what
drives the overturning circulation in the SO?
4forcing
Ocean gains buoyancy
from SOC climatology
5sea surface altimetry from ERS
Chris Hughes pers comm
Eddies in the SO
Hallberg and Griffies pers comm
6mixing in the Southern Ocean
log10 K? m2 s-1 along ALBATROSS cruise track
Naveira Garabato et al 2003
7What drives the quasi-zonal circulation ?
8Six Circumpolar Currents
driven by NCEP winds and surface buoyancy flux
driven by NCEP winds
9depth, f/h and forcing
surf buoy flux BRIOS
10BARBI physics
barotropic momentum streamfunction baroclinic
potential energy ? perturbation density bottom
pressure baroclinic momentum
Olbers Eden 2003
11BARBI physics
vorticity balance
consistency constraint
Poisson equation
bclinic momentum balance
potential energy balance
buoyancy forcing
nabla-4 operator
12BARBI physics waves
eigenvectors
projection vectors
flat bottom
topographic
13NL
NO
WQ
QQ
baroclinic potential energy drives vorticity of
vertically averaged momentum via
JEBAR determines transport of shear
velocity relative to bottom
14BT
WQ
FL
QQ
NL
NO
bottom pressure affects zonal mean balance of
zonal momentum via bottom formstress drives
vorticity of vertically integrated momentum
via bottom torque determines
geostrophic bottom velocity
15Momentum balance zonally integrated
DP
16NL
pressure P bottom elevation
QQ
17Momentum balance normal and parallel to
streamlines
friction
P gradient
Coriolis
wind
normal
parrallel
flat bottom FL
18Momentum balance normal and parallel to
streamlines
friction
P gradient
Coriolis
wind
normal
parrallel
homogeneous density BT
19Momentum balance normal and parallel to
streamlines
friction
P E gradient
Coriolis
wind
normal
parrallel
nonlinear NL
20Vorticity balance
topo-plan Jac
JEBAR
wind curl
friction
WQ
21Potential energy balance
advection
btropic pump
bclinic pump
diffusion
buoy force
Ekm pump
WQ
22What drives the circulation ?
23What drives the circulation ?
diffusive regime
24small bottom slope regime bclinic Stommel
problem
What drives the circulation ?
25What drives the circulation ?
ACC regime
26What drives the circulation ?
buoy force
Ekm pump
eddy diff
direct wind
eddy visc
beta
WQ
27Summary 1
-
- the dynamics of ACC transport is governed by
linear response of topographic-planetary waves
(two gravest modes) to wind and buoyancy forcing
(interior vertical turbulent buoyancy flux gt
mixing) - direct wind driving and Ekman pumping on
stratification are of comparable size, the
buoyancy forcing smaller (in this set-up) - baroclinicity breaks f/h constraint and restores
f-characteristics (but bottom pressure still
governed by f/h) - eddy diffusion (GM) overwhelms eddy viscosity in
shaping circulation and transport of ACC - JEBAR is not a good concept
-
28How to interprete eddy fluxes ?
29Historical background
- Andrews and McIntyre (1976, 1978)
- - pointed out that eddy fluxes can be
advective in - nature the
Transformed Eulerian Mean (TEM) -
streamfunctions
DJF
Eulerian Mean Circulation
90 N
90 S
Residual Mean Circulation
90 N
90 S
30Historical background
- Andrews and McIntyre (1976, 1978)
- - pointed out that eddy fluxes can be
advective in - nature the
Transformed Eulerian Mean (TEM) - Marshall and Shutts (1981)
- - pointed out the need to consider
rotational fluxes -
storm track
31Historical background
- Andrews and McIntyre (1976, 1978)
- - pointed out that eddy fluxes can be
advective in - nature the
Transformed Eulerian Mean (TEM) - Marshall and Shutts (1981)
- - pointed out the need to consider
rotational fluxes - McDougall and McIntosh (1996, 2001)
- - tried to combine the above the Temporal
Residual Mean (TRM) - Tandon and Garrett (1996), Radko and Marshall
(2003) - - pointed out that eddy fluxes can (must)
also be diabatic in nature - Greatbatch (2001)
- - attempted to combine the rotational,
advective and diffusive flux ideas into a unified
theory - Medvedev and Greatbatch (2004)
- - still the possibility of a negative
diffusivity (normal flux of variance) - Eden, Greatbatch and Olbers (2005)
32Balances
3d density balance
Q represents diabatic processes we do zonal
averaging e.g. averaging along a latitude
circle in Southern Ocean or atmosphere but
theory works as well on horizontal plane and
can be generalised to 3d and other kinds of
averaging
33Balances
3d density balance
34Notations
35Classical decompositions
TEM
36Eddy fluxes in a channel model
instantaneous temperature at 1000 m
depth
- CHANNEL-3
- modified MOM code (FLAME)
- reentrant channel, 2000 m depth
- horizontal resolution of 30 km, 20 levels of
100 m thickness - initial condition uniformly sloping isopycnals
across channel - forcing relaxation towards initial condition
near side walls
37- CHANNEL-6
- modified MOM code (FLAME)
- reentrant channel, 2000 m depth
- horizontal resolution of 15 km, 40 levels of
50 m thickness - initial condition uniformly sloping isopycnals
across channel - forcing relaxation towards initial condition
near side walls
38- CHANNEL-12
- modified MOM code (FLAME)
- reentrant channel, 2000 m depth
- horizontal resolution of 7.5 km, 80 levels of
25 m thickness - initial condition uniformly sloping isopycnals
across channel - forcing relaxation towards initial condition
near side walls
39Eulerian mean cross-channel flow is essentially
zero
residual streamfunction B
diffusivity K cm2/s
large negative K evidence of rotational fluxes
TEM-G
red lines are the mean b contours
40Integral constraints
integrate over area above an isopycnal
mean
higher moments
steady conditions eddies flux diabatically to
balance mean diabatic forcing
integrated flux is zero in steady, adiabatic
conditions
41Summary so far the diagnosed fluxes contain
nondivergent (rotational) contributions which
lead to an overestimation of diapycnal effects
and negative K the (diapycnic) eddy diffusivity
should - vanish in adiabatic and in steady
flow - reflect the dependence on the diabatic
forcing (locally ???) Mission find a
representation of eddy fluxes which acknowledges
these requirements
42Decompositions with rotational fluxes
has zero divergence
points along mean contours
points across mean contours
43Decompositions with rotational fluxes
44Decomposition using all the higher moments TRM-G
(generalized TRM)
45same reasoning applies to all orders of moment
equations
46Decomposition using all the higher moments TRM-G
(generalized TRM)
for steady case
TRM-G
47Decomposition using all the higher moments TRM-G
(generalized TRM)
for steady case
TRM-G
steady, adiabatic K 0
but local ?
481st order
2nd order
TRM G for channel
3rd order
4th order
2nd order
1st order TEM-G
3rd order
4th order
49Decomposition using all the higher moments TRM-G
(generalised TRM)
Andrews and McIntyre 1976, 1978 McDougall and
McIntosh 1996
downgradient, in general
50Summary 2
- The generalised Temporal Residual Mean (TRM-G)
is - a fully consistent formulation that
-
- (i) combines advective, diffusive and
rotational fluxes - (ii) gives zero diffusivity in steady,
adiabatic conditions - (iii) can be adapted to any kind of
averaging, including - isopycnal
averaging and 3-D situations - (iv) the diffusivity K is, in general,
down the mean gradient - when (a) there is growth of eddy
variance (non-steady) or - (b) irreversible removal of
eddy variance (steady)
TRM-G combines TEM, TRM, Marshall and Shutts
theories into one!
51What drives the meridional overturning ?
52CFC-12 and anthropogenic CO2 on SR3
53basic model setup
upper layer regime forcing eddies turb mixing
mixed layer
z 0
z - d
slope layer
z - a
Mode
interior regime no turb mixing adiabatic eddies
isopycnals
y yN
y 0
residual circulation
54the ACC path mean
zonal windstress
forcing
surface density flux
NCEP
Average temperature and salinity along estimated
path of the ACC. Use 3C at 200m depth as
criterion
55The interior regime
56interior density balance 1/2
mixing
eddy flux
mean advection
57interior density balance 2/2
assume
and
and zero mixing
58momentum balance
bottom formstress
Reynolds stress
windstress
stress
Ekman transport
59estimating interior eddy diffusivities
60neutral density field
density black linesslope of isopycnals
colorpercent of blocked flow white contours
ocean interior
61constructing ?(B)
AAIW
NADW
62CFC inventory 8 Sv AABW 21 Sv total input to
deep ocean
Orsi et al. 2002
63eddy diffusivities from the adiabatic model
64a prognostic model of theoverturning
65z - d
z - a
initial condition on slope s
AAIW
isopycnals
NADW
AABW
y yN
y 0
66z 0
z - d
z - a
upper layer balances use complete density
balance and project on profiles
eddy terms mixing terms forcing terms
67boundary conditions
z 0
z - d
z - a
Mode
AAIW
isopycnals
NADW
AABW
bc and mixing
no bc and no mixing
68solutions
z - d
z - a
dashed and dotted SAC climatology full this
model
upper layer
ocean interior
69K_s ?
K_i ?
parameter variations
a ?
a ?
70Summary 3
- eddy K O(500 1000) below ML, with near
surface maximum - deep K relates to NADW transport
- gross features of SO overturning can be modeled
by simple mixed layer physics (wind, surf buoy
flux, mixing, eddies) and adiabatic ocean
interior - strength and depth of overturning depend on all
parameters windstress, surface buoyancy flux,
mixing in ML and eddy field - wind and eddy driven overturning partially
compensate (for the present forcing functions) - bottom layer AABW ?
-
71Review articles Rintoul, S.R., C. Hughes and D.
Olbers. The Antarctic Circumpolar Current system.
In G. Siedler, J. Church and J. Gould, editor,
Ocean Circulation and Climate, 271-302. New York,
Academic Press, 2001 Olbers, D., D. Borowski, C.
Völker and J.-O. Wolff. The dynamical balance,
transport and circulation of the Antarctic
Circumpolar Current. Antarctic Science, 16, 79
109, 2004 Olbers, D. On the role of eddy mixing
in the transport of zonal ocean currents. In
Marine Turbulence Theories, Observations, and
Models, ed. Helmut Baumert, John Simpson, and
Jürgen Sündermann, 511 - 529. Cambridge
University Press 2005 Articles Olbers, D. and
C. Eden. A simplified general circulation model
for a baroclinic ocean with topography. Part I,
Theory, waves and winddriven circulations.
Journal of Physical Oceanography, 33, 27192737,
2003 Olbers, D., and M. Visbeck A model of the
zonally averaged stratification and overturning
in the Southern Ocean. JPO, 35, 1190-1205,
2005 Eden, C., Greatbatch, R., and D. Olbers
Interpreting eddy fluxes. JPO, revised
2005 Olbers, D., K. Lettmann and R. Timmermann
Six circumpolar currents, in prep