A basin-wide estimate of vertical mixing in the upper pycnocline: spreading of bomb tritium in the North Pacific Ocean

The vertical diffusivity KV in the upper half-kilometer of the North Pacific subtropical pycnocline is estimated from observations of the spreading rate of anthropogenic tritium. The calculation is based on approximately 300 ocean tritium profiles made since tritium was introduced to the atmosphere...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dan E. Kelley, Kim A. Van Scoy
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.523.84
http://myweb.dal.ca/kelley/pub/pub_sci/Kelley_VanScoy_JPO_1999/Kelley_VanScoy_JPO_1999.pdf
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Summary:The vertical diffusivity KV in the upper half-kilometer of the North Pacific subtropical pycnocline is estimated from observations of the spreading rate of anthropogenic tritium. The calculation is based on approximately 300 ocean tritium profiles made since tritium was introduced to the atmosphere via bomb testing in the 1960s. The data coverage does not permit detailed mapping of tritium penetration, especially in the sparsely sampled western Pacific. For this reason, and to minimize advective effects, the spreading rate is averaged within the closed streamlines of the subtropical gyre spanning;58N to;408N. The result, KV 5 (1.5 6 0.7) 3 1025 m2 s21, is consistent with inferences from microstructure and purposefully released tracer measurements in the North Atlantic, confirming that the spatially averaged rate of mixing in the upper pycnocline is substantially lower than the canonical Munk estimate for the lower pycnocline. 1.