Title: The Ocean General Circulation (satellite)
1The Ocean General Circulation (satellite)
2Mean Circulation in the Ocean
3Mean Circulation in the Ocean
California Current
4Annual mean Salinity Map
5Dissolved Oxygen
Surface
500 meter depth
6Major oceanic circulation systems
7Ocean wind driven circulation
Learning Objectives How does the wind drive
surface currents Upwelling and Downwelling
8Gulf Stream, Plankton Bloom (SeaWiFS, AVHRR)
9Gulf Stream Spiral Eddies
10Mediterranean Sea, Shear Wall Spiral Eddies
11Tropical Atlantic, Spiral Eddy
12Greek Island, Spiral Eddies and Wakes
13Strait of Gibraltar, Solitons
14Eastern Pacific Internal Waves
15Kelvin Waves, from Ships
16Coastal Dynamics
California Filaments and Phytoplankton
Hawaiian Island Wakes
17Some important differences between ocean and
atmosphere
Ocean is heated from above Feels both
Mechanical forcing by the winds Thermal
forcing from the sun Boundaries and complex
geometry associated with continents and bottom
topography, and bathymetry Ocean is denser than
atmosphere Tides Salinity Atmosphere has
clouds and moisture
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19How is the energy of the winds transferred to the
ocean?
Ekman Theory
20How does wind force propagate in the ocean?
surface
balance between friction and rotation
100 meter depth
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22Ekman Theory and vertical advection in the
ocean COASTAL UPWELLING and DOWNWELLING
OPEN OCEAN EKMAN PUMPING
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26Effects of Ekman Currents
27Atmosphere
60
30
Ocean
28Sea surface height
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31Temperature
Surface
150 meter depth
32Some practical rules to remember
Applies to the Ocean same as Atmosphere!
Fpressure
Low Pressure
High Pressure
FCoriolis
- Particle will have the Coriolis effect 90 degrees
to the right - Particles will tend to move along line of
constant pressure - Particles will have the high pressure on their
right (same as Coriolis)
33Glacier melting
Evidence of Global Warming in the Climate System
- Kilimanjaro ice caps are 80 gone since early
1900s - All glaciers in tropics are melting rapidly
- Impacts water supply, power generation, tourism,
local climate and ecology
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35Arctic - the most sensitive ecosystem?
- Arctic sea ice has shrunk by 1 million sq km and
thinned from 3.1m to 1.8m average - More freshwater, reduced ability to travel over
ice - All summer ice gone in this century
- Ecological consequences huge!
36Arctic warming
- Sea ice melting
- Key feedback! (animation)
- Reduces albedo (reflectivity) of earth, allowing
more radiation to be absorbed - http//www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/2003/1023esuice.
html - Warming temperature
- Melts permafrost
- Ice sheet stability? Key sea level question!
- Rate of warming 8x faster in last 20 years than
in last 100
1979
2003
37Arctic ecosystems impacts
- Reduced ice less algal production under ice
undermines base of food chain - Seal pups emerge just when ice is melting -
earlier melt means they are exposed before ready
to thrive - Caribou need ice to island-hop they are falling
through as ice thins - Polar bears hunt on ice in winter, retreat to
land in summer. Less ice forces them onto land
earlier
38Higher sea level
- As water warms, it expands (thermal
expansion). - Glaciers are melting
- Observation 3mm/yr in past few decades
- Prediction 0.5m rise by the end of this
century, 2-4m in 500 years
- This will have a major impact on
- Developed coastal regions
- Low-lying island nations
- Intensity of coastal flooding during storm surges
- Coastal ecosystems (e.g. mangroves, estuaries)
39More intense storms
Hurricanes get their energy and staying power
from warm water in the tropical oceans. As
waters get warmer, we expect that hurricanes will
become more intense. Significant change not yet
observed.
40Oceanography and Climate - millennial timescales
Vertical circulation of the ocean
MOVIE The Day After Tomorrow