Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability

Abstract: Onshore penetration of oceanic water across the Antarctic continental slope (ACS) plays a major role in global sea level rise by delivering heat to the Antarctic marginal seas, thus contributing to the basal melting of ice shelves. Here the time‐mean (Φmean) and eddy (Φeddy) components of...

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Main Authors: Palóczy, André, Gille, Sarah T, McClean, Julie L
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5cq8d6wd
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt5cq8d6wd 2024-01-14T10:02:22+01:00 Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability Palóczy, André Gille, Sarah T McClean, Julie L 7678 - 7701 2018-11-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5cq8d6wd unknown eScholarship, University of California qt5cq8d6wd https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5cq8d6wd public Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, vol 123, iss 11 Earth Sciences Oceanography Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience Climate Action Southern Ocean oceanic heat transport Antarctic marginal seas cross-shelf exchange global hydrodynamic modeling decadal variability Geophysics article 2018 ftcdlib 2023-12-18T19:07:59Z Abstract: Onshore penetration of oceanic water across the Antarctic continental slope (ACS) plays a major role in global sea level rise by delivering heat to the Antarctic marginal seas, thus contributing to the basal melting of ice shelves. Here the time‐mean (Φmean) and eddy (Φeddy) components of the heat transport (Φ) across the 1,000‐m isobath along the entire ACS are investigated using a 0.1∘ global coupled ocean/sea ice simulation based on the Los Alamos Parallel Ocean Program (POP) and sea ice (Community Ice CodE) models. Comparison with in situ hydrography shows that the model successfully represents the basic water mass structure, with a warm bias in the Circumpolar Deep Water layer. Segments of on‐shelf Φ, with lengths of O(100–1,000km), are found along the ACS. The circumpolar integral of the annually averaged Φ is O(20TW), with Φeddy always on‐shelf, while Φmean fluctuates between on‐shelf and off‐shelf. Stirring along isoneutral surfaces is often the dominant process by which eddies transport heat across the ACS, but advection of heat by both mean flow‐topography interactions and eddies can also be significant depending on the along‐ and across‐slope location. The seasonal and interannual variability of the circumpolarly integrated Φmean is controlled by convergence of Ekman transport within the ACS. Prominent warming features at the bottom of the continental shelf (consistent with observed temperature trends) are found both during high‐Southern Annular Mode and high‐Niño 3.4 periods, suggesting that climate modes can modulate the heat transfer from the Southern Ocean to the ACS across the entire Antarctic margin. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Ice Shelves Sea ice Southern Ocean University of California: eScholarship Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Earth Sciences
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Climate Action
Southern Ocean
oceanic heat transport
Antarctic marginal seas
cross-shelf exchange
global hydrodynamic modeling
decadal variability
Geophysics
spellingShingle Earth Sciences
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Climate Action
Southern Ocean
oceanic heat transport
Antarctic marginal seas
cross-shelf exchange
global hydrodynamic modeling
decadal variability
Geophysics
Palóczy, André
Gille, Sarah T
McClean, Julie L
Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability
topic_facet Earth Sciences
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Climate Action
Southern Ocean
oceanic heat transport
Antarctic marginal seas
cross-shelf exchange
global hydrodynamic modeling
decadal variability
Geophysics
description Abstract: Onshore penetration of oceanic water across the Antarctic continental slope (ACS) plays a major role in global sea level rise by delivering heat to the Antarctic marginal seas, thus contributing to the basal melting of ice shelves. Here the time‐mean (Φmean) and eddy (Φeddy) components of the heat transport (Φ) across the 1,000‐m isobath along the entire ACS are investigated using a 0.1∘ global coupled ocean/sea ice simulation based on the Los Alamos Parallel Ocean Program (POP) and sea ice (Community Ice CodE) models. Comparison with in situ hydrography shows that the model successfully represents the basic water mass structure, with a warm bias in the Circumpolar Deep Water layer. Segments of on‐shelf Φ, with lengths of O(100–1,000km), are found along the ACS. The circumpolar integral of the annually averaged Φ is O(20TW), with Φeddy always on‐shelf, while Φmean fluctuates between on‐shelf and off‐shelf. Stirring along isoneutral surfaces is often the dominant process by which eddies transport heat across the ACS, but advection of heat by both mean flow‐topography interactions and eddies can also be significant depending on the along‐ and across‐slope location. The seasonal and interannual variability of the circumpolarly integrated Φmean is controlled by convergence of Ekman transport within the ACS. Prominent warming features at the bottom of the continental shelf (consistent with observed temperature trends) are found both during high‐Southern Annular Mode and high‐Niño 3.4 periods, suggesting that climate modes can modulate the heat transfer from the Southern Ocean to the ACS across the entire Antarctic margin.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Palóczy, André
Gille, Sarah T
McClean, Julie L
author_facet Palóczy, André
Gille, Sarah T
McClean, Julie L
author_sort Palóczy, André
title Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability
title_short Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability
title_full Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability
title_fullStr Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability
title_full_unstemmed Oceanic Heat Delivery to the Antarctic Continental Shelf: Large‐Scale, Low‐Frequency Variability
title_sort oceanic heat delivery to the antarctic continental shelf: large‐scale, low‐frequency variability
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2018
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5cq8d6wd
op_coverage 7678 - 7701
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Shelves
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Shelves
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
op_source Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, vol 123, iss 11
op_relation qt5cq8d6wd
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5cq8d6wd
op_rights public
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