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The General Circulation of the Atmosphere and Oceans

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In Hadley cell, warmer air rises and moves poleward. ... Pole-to-pole Hadley Cell is unstable in the presence of rotation, hence the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The General Circulation of the Atmosphere and Oceans


1
The General Circulation of the Atmosphere and
Oceans
ATS 351 Lecture 9 November 2, 2009
2
The Global Heat Budget
Collects in tropics Escapes near poles
and aloft
  • The Atmosphere has a radiative/convective
    equilibrium in the vertical
  • Incoming and outgoing radiation
  • Covection and subsidence
  • It also has a similar equilibrium in the
    horizontal

3
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4
Single-Cell Model
  • Assumptions
  • Earths surface uniformly covered with water
  • Sun is always directly over equator
  • The earth does not rotate
  • A huge thermally direct cell develops in each
    hemisphere
  • Warm air rises and cold air sinks

5
Single-Cell Model
  • Assumptions
  • Earths surface uniformly covered with water
  • Sun is always directly over equator
  • The earth does not rotate
  • A huge thermally direct cell develops in each
    hemisphere
  • Warm air rises and cold air sinks

6
Three-Cell Model
  • Add in rotation
  • Three cells in each hemisphere
  • Hadley cell
  • Ferrel cell
  • Polar cell
  • Weak winds at the Equator (doldrums) and 30
    degrees (horse latitudes)?
  • Boundary between cold polar air and mid-latitude
    warmer air is the polar front.

7
Three-Cell Model
  • Hadley Cell
  • Thermally direct
  • Driven by meridional gradient in heating
  • Air rises near the equator and sinks near 30
    degrees
  • Explains deserts, trade winds, ITCZ
  • Ferrel Cell
  • Thermally indirect
  • Driven by heat transports of eddies (storms)?
  • Air rises near 60 degrees and sinks near 30
    degrees
  • Polar cell
  • Thermally direct

8
Inside the Ferrel Cell
  • Westerly momentum is transferred from the earth
    to the atmosphere in the trade wind belt
  • Westerly momentum is transferred from the
    atmosphere to the earth in the midlatitudes
  • Why dont the midlatitude westerlies slow down
    over time?
  • Eddies (storms) transfer momentum poleward in the
    upper troposphere
  • This momentum transfer weakens the Hadley
    circulation, but drives the Ferrel Cell

9
Three-Cell Model
10
3-Cell Model Pressure
11
The Real World
  • Its much more messy!
  • Continents, mountains, ice fields and forests all
    get in the way.
  • The real wind patterns form around
    quasi-permanent high and low pressure systems
    rather than the banded ones discussed previously.
  • During winter, highs form over the land, lows
    over the oceans. This flips in the summer.
    WHY?
  • The Bermuda high and Pacific High form near 30
    degrees north in response to convergence aloft
    (mainly in the NH summer)
  • ITCZ moves south in January and north in July

12
Global Pressure Patterns
Winter
Summer
13
Global Precipitation Patterns
January
  • Very Wet in the tropics (ITCZ)
  • Monsoon Regions
  • Seasonal Shift of the ITCZ
  • Mid latitudes get more rain in the summer
  • Storm tracks
  • More variability in the NH

July
14
Take Home Concepts
  1. Driven by differential solar heating between the
    equator and the poles. Acts to move heat
    poleward.
  2. In Hadley cell, warmer air rises and moves
    poleward.
  3. Ferrel cell is driven by heat and momentum fluxes
    by eddies.
  4. In the NH, air is deflected to the right as it
    moves. Opposite in SH.
  5. Pole-to-pole Hadley Cell is unstable in the
    presence of rotation, hence the single cell model
    breaks down.
  6. Rotation makes the trade winds, surface
    westerlies, and jet streams

15
But What about the Oceans?
16
But What about the Oceans?
Heat still needs to be transported poleward
17
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18
Temperature Structure of the Ocean
  • Mixed Layer
  • Temperature in the top 50 m doesnt change much
    with depth
  • Thermocline
  • Rapid temperature drop
  • Deep ocean

19
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20
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21
What causes ocean circulation?
  • The direction of most ocean currents is
    determined largely by the wind
  • Coriolis force acts to turn the moving water to
    the right (in the NH)
  • Friction directly opposes motion
  • Resulting current at the surface moves 45 to the
    right of the surface wind (in the NH)

22
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23
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24
Ocean Gyres
  • Idealized gyre is a rotating dome of water
  • Real world gyres are asymmetric
  • Eastern boundary current is wide and moves slowly
  • Western boundary current is much faster
  • (e.g. the Gulf Stream)

25
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26
Coastal Upwelling
  • Along west coast of U.S. prevailing wind is from
    the north in the summer
  • Ekman pumping along western coasts leads to ocean
    moving away from the land
  • Need upwelling to compensate colder deepwater
    moves up near the coast
  • Ocean temperatures off the coast of California
    are typically much colder than at similar
    latitudes on the east coast

27
El Nino La Nina
El Nino
La Nina
28
El Nino La Nina
  • Non-El Nino
  • Upwelling and cooler water in eastern Pacific
  • Warmer water in western Pacific
  • El Nino
  • Change in pressure causes trades to reverse
  • Reverses figure above - warmer in eastern
    Pacific

29
North America and ENSO
  • El Nino
  • Wet weather and storms into California and the
    southern part of US
  • Weak polar jet stream over Canada creates warmer
    than normal weather over a large part of NA
  • La Nina
  • Moist air from ocean is directed into the Pacific
    NW wet winter for that region
  • Winter months in southern part of US tend to be
    warmer and drier than normal

30
Thermohaline Circulation
  • Circulation in the ocean is also caused by
    density differences
  • Density differences come from differences in
    temperature (thermo) and salinity (haline)
  • In the north Atlantic, freezing leads to high
    salinity content
  • Cold, salty water sinks and forms North Atlantic
    Deep Water
  • Warmer water moves in at the surface to replace
    the mass lost

31
Thermohaline Circulation
32
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