The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation

The meridional overturning circulation of the global oceans is thought to be a result of an interplay, not yet well understood, of surface buoyancy fluxes, wind-driven upwelling and turbulent mixing. One factor believed to be important to this interplay is the latitudinal distribution of the surface...

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Main Author: Stewart, Kial Douglas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: The Australian National University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d5fccf1dfe9a
https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/149648
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spelling ftdatacite:10.25911/5d5fccf1dfe9a 2023-05-15T16:30:43+02:00 The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation Stewart, Kial Douglas 2012 https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d5fccf1dfe9a https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/149648 en eng The Australian National University Author retains copyright Meridional overturning circulation North Atlantic Ocean Ocean mixing Ocean circulation Oceanography Research Other CreativeWork article Thesis (PhD) 2012 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25911/5d5fccf1dfe9a 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The meridional overturning circulation of the global oceans is thought to be a result of an interplay, not yet well understood, of surface buoyancy fluxes, wind-driven upwelling and turbulent mixing. One factor believed to be important to this interplay is the latitudinal distribution of the surface buoyancy fluxes. The resulting convective circulation can be modeled in idealized laboratory experiments and numerical solutions. The convection has a number of features in common with the meridional overturning circulation and is used in this thesis to examine the effects of topography and turbulent mixing on the global oceans. A set of laboratory experiments is used to explore the effect of a partial barrier (modeling a sill in an ocean basin) on an overturning circulation. The experiments are forced by a gradient in either surface temperatures or heat fluxes, show that the sill will influence the density field when the sill depth is less than twice the boundary layer (or thermocline) depth. Application of the results to the North Atlantic circulation suggests that the Greenland-Scotland Ridge is shallow enough to significantly reduce the density of North Atlantic Deep Water, and this is consistent with the conclusions from an analysis of water mass properties. A set of numerical solutions is used to investigate the effect of a sill on an overturning circulation from an energetics viewpoint. Specifically, the numerical solutions provide a means to test various methods of defining a reference potential energy state of no motion, an exercise complicated by topographic barriers. Ignoring the topography overestimates of available potential energy of the circulation. However, it is found that the method used to determine the reference state does not significantly affect the calculated rate of energy input from surface buoyancy fluxes, which is the quantity of dynamic importance to the maintenance of the circulation. A second set of laboratory experiments is used to examine the effects of externally imposed rates of small-scale mixing on the overturning circulation forced by differential surface buoyancy fluxes. Sources of stabilizing and destabilizing buoyancy were applied at the surface and mechanical stirring was imposed throughout the depth. When the added stirring (and consequent mixing) provides the dominant contribution to the total vertical transport, measurements of the equilibrated circulation show a dependence of boundary layer thickness and overturning transport on the mixing rate in accord with a theoretical model. For weak or no external stirring, internal processes maintain a level of vertical transport approximately 200 times larger than that expected by molecular diffusion and it is argued that this includes a component that is not irreversible mixing but which is instead advection due to turbulent entrainment into the sinking plume. With reference to the oceans, it is shown that the primary effect of mixing (with energy sourced from winds, tides and convection) is to deepen the thermocline, thereby influencing the buoyancy entrained by the plume. It is concluded that the advective transport of buoyancy by the plume, and not vertical mixing, is crucial for coupling the surface to the abyss. -- provided by Candidate. Thesis Greenland Greenland-Scotland Ridge North Atlantic Deep Water North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Meridional overturning circulation North Atlantic Ocean
Ocean mixing
Ocean circulation
Oceanography Research
spellingShingle Meridional overturning circulation North Atlantic Ocean
Ocean mixing
Ocean circulation
Oceanography Research
Stewart, Kial Douglas
The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation
topic_facet Meridional overturning circulation North Atlantic Ocean
Ocean mixing
Ocean circulation
Oceanography Research
description The meridional overturning circulation of the global oceans is thought to be a result of an interplay, not yet well understood, of surface buoyancy fluxes, wind-driven upwelling and turbulent mixing. One factor believed to be important to this interplay is the latitudinal distribution of the surface buoyancy fluxes. The resulting convective circulation can be modeled in idealized laboratory experiments and numerical solutions. The convection has a number of features in common with the meridional overturning circulation and is used in this thesis to examine the effects of topography and turbulent mixing on the global oceans. A set of laboratory experiments is used to explore the effect of a partial barrier (modeling a sill in an ocean basin) on an overturning circulation. The experiments are forced by a gradient in either surface temperatures or heat fluxes, show that the sill will influence the density field when the sill depth is less than twice the boundary layer (or thermocline) depth. Application of the results to the North Atlantic circulation suggests that the Greenland-Scotland Ridge is shallow enough to significantly reduce the density of North Atlantic Deep Water, and this is consistent with the conclusions from an analysis of water mass properties. A set of numerical solutions is used to investigate the effect of a sill on an overturning circulation from an energetics viewpoint. Specifically, the numerical solutions provide a means to test various methods of defining a reference potential energy state of no motion, an exercise complicated by topographic barriers. Ignoring the topography overestimates of available potential energy of the circulation. However, it is found that the method used to determine the reference state does not significantly affect the calculated rate of energy input from surface buoyancy fluxes, which is the quantity of dynamic importance to the maintenance of the circulation. A second set of laboratory experiments is used to examine the effects of externally imposed rates of small-scale mixing on the overturning circulation forced by differential surface buoyancy fluxes. Sources of stabilizing and destabilizing buoyancy were applied at the surface and mechanical stirring was imposed throughout the depth. When the added stirring (and consequent mixing) provides the dominant contribution to the total vertical transport, measurements of the equilibrated circulation show a dependence of boundary layer thickness and overturning transport on the mixing rate in accord with a theoretical model. For weak or no external stirring, internal processes maintain a level of vertical transport approximately 200 times larger than that expected by molecular diffusion and it is argued that this includes a component that is not irreversible mixing but which is instead advection due to turbulent entrainment into the sinking plume. With reference to the oceans, it is shown that the primary effect of mixing (with energy sourced from winds, tides and convection) is to deepen the thermocline, thereby influencing the buoyancy entrained by the plume. It is concluded that the advective transport of buoyancy by the plume, and not vertical mixing, is crucial for coupling the surface to the abyss. -- provided by Candidate.
format Thesis
author Stewart, Kial Douglas
author_facet Stewart, Kial Douglas
author_sort Stewart, Kial Douglas
title The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation
title_short The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation
title_full The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation
title_fullStr The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation
title_full_unstemmed The effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation
title_sort effects of sills and mixing on the meridional overturning circulation
publisher The Australian National University
publishDate 2012
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d5fccf1dfe9a
https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/149648
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
Greenland-Scotland Ridge
North Atlantic Deep Water
North Atlantic
genre_facet Greenland
Greenland-Scotland Ridge
North Atlantic Deep Water
North Atlantic
op_rights Author retains copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25911/5d5fccf1dfe9a
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