Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12).

Biogeochemical Argo floats, profiling to 2,000-m depth, are being deployed throughout the Southern Ocean by the Southern Ocean Carbon and Climate Observations and Modeling program (SOCCOM). The goal is 200 floats by 2020, to provide the first full set of annual cycles of carbon, oxygen, nitrate, and...

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Main Authors: Talley, LD, Rosso, I, Kamenkovich, I, Mazloff, MR, Wang, J, Boss, E, Gray, AR, Johnson, KS, Key, RM, Riser, SC, Williams, NL, Sarmiento, JL
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/20q2b67t
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt20q2b67t 2023-05-15T13:32:36+02:00 Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12). Talley, LD Rosso, I Kamenkovich, I Mazloff, MR Wang, J Boss, E Gray, AR Johnson, KS Key, RM Riser, SC Williams, NL Sarmiento, JL 403 - 431 2019-01-21 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/20q2b67t unknown eScholarship, University of California qt20q2b67t https://escholarship.org/uc/item/20q2b67t public Journal of geophysical research. Oceans, vol 124, iss 1 Southern Ocean biogeochemical floats carbon cycle circulation sea ice water masses Geophysics Oceanography Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience article 2019 ftcdlib 2021-01-24T17:38:12Z Biogeochemical Argo floats, profiling to 2,000-m depth, are being deployed throughout the Southern Ocean by the Southern Ocean Carbon and Climate Observations and Modeling program (SOCCOM). The goal is 200 floats by 2020, to provide the first full set of annual cycles of carbon, oxygen, nitrate, and optical properties across multiple oceanographic regimes. Building from no prior coverage to a sparse array, deployments are based on prior knowledge of water mass properties, mean frontal locations, mean circulation and eddy variability, winds, air-sea heat/freshwater/carbon exchange, prior Argo trajectories, and float simulations in the Southern Ocean State Estimate and Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM). Twelve floats deployed from the 2014-2015 Polarstern cruise from South Africa to Antarctica are used as a test case to evaluate the deployment strategy adopted for SOCCOM's 20 deployment cruises and 126 floats to date. After several years, these floats continue to represent the deployment zones targeted in advance: (1) Weddell Gyre sea ice zone, observing the Antarctic Slope Front, and a decadally-rare polynya over Maud Rise; (2) Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) including the topographically steered Southern Zone chimney where upwelling carbon/nutrient-rich deep waters produce surprisingly large carbon dioxide outgassing; (3) Subantarctic and Subtropical zones between the ACC and Africa; and (4) Cape Basin. Argo floats and eddy-resolving HYCOM simulations were the best predictors of individual SOCCOM float pathways, with uncertainty after 2 years of order 1,000 km in the sea ice zone and more than double that in and north of the ACC. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Sea ice Southern Ocean University of California: eScholarship Antarctic Greenwich Maud Rise ENVELOPE(3.000,3.000,-66.000,-66.000) Southern Ocean The Antarctic Weddell
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Southern Ocean
biogeochemical floats
carbon cycle
circulation
sea ice
water masses
Geophysics
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
spellingShingle Southern Ocean
biogeochemical floats
carbon cycle
circulation
sea ice
water masses
Geophysics
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Talley, LD
Rosso, I
Kamenkovich, I
Mazloff, MR
Wang, J
Boss, E
Gray, AR
Johnson, KS
Key, RM
Riser, SC
Williams, NL
Sarmiento, JL
Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12).
topic_facet Southern Ocean
biogeochemical floats
carbon cycle
circulation
sea ice
water masses
Geophysics
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
description Biogeochemical Argo floats, profiling to 2,000-m depth, are being deployed throughout the Southern Ocean by the Southern Ocean Carbon and Climate Observations and Modeling program (SOCCOM). The goal is 200 floats by 2020, to provide the first full set of annual cycles of carbon, oxygen, nitrate, and optical properties across multiple oceanographic regimes. Building from no prior coverage to a sparse array, deployments are based on prior knowledge of water mass properties, mean frontal locations, mean circulation and eddy variability, winds, air-sea heat/freshwater/carbon exchange, prior Argo trajectories, and float simulations in the Southern Ocean State Estimate and Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM). Twelve floats deployed from the 2014-2015 Polarstern cruise from South Africa to Antarctica are used as a test case to evaluate the deployment strategy adopted for SOCCOM's 20 deployment cruises and 126 floats to date. After several years, these floats continue to represent the deployment zones targeted in advance: (1) Weddell Gyre sea ice zone, observing the Antarctic Slope Front, and a decadally-rare polynya over Maud Rise; (2) Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) including the topographically steered Southern Zone chimney where upwelling carbon/nutrient-rich deep waters produce surprisingly large carbon dioxide outgassing; (3) Subantarctic and Subtropical zones between the ACC and Africa; and (4) Cape Basin. Argo floats and eddy-resolving HYCOM simulations were the best predictors of individual SOCCOM float pathways, with uncertainty after 2 years of order 1,000 km in the sea ice zone and more than double that in and north of the ACC.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Talley, LD
Rosso, I
Kamenkovich, I
Mazloff, MR
Wang, J
Boss, E
Gray, AR
Johnson, KS
Key, RM
Riser, SC
Williams, NL
Sarmiento, JL
author_facet Talley, LD
Rosso, I
Kamenkovich, I
Mazloff, MR
Wang, J
Boss, E
Gray, AR
Johnson, KS
Key, RM
Riser, SC
Williams, NL
Sarmiento, JL
author_sort Talley, LD
title Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12).
title_short Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12).
title_full Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12).
title_fullStr Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12).
title_full_unstemmed Southern Ocean Biogeochemical Float Deployment Strategy, With Example From the Greenwich Meridian Line (GO-SHIP A12).
title_sort southern ocean biogeochemical float deployment strategy, with example from the greenwich meridian line (go-ship a12).
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2019
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/20q2b67t
op_coverage 403 - 431
long_lat ENVELOPE(3.000,3.000,-66.000,-66.000)
geographic Antarctic
Greenwich
Maud Rise
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Weddell
geographic_facet Antarctic
Greenwich
Maud Rise
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Weddell
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
op_source Journal of geophysical research. Oceans, vol 124, iss 1
op_relation qt20q2b67t
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/20q2b67t
op_rights public
_version_ 1766028583899234304