Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is well known for its multiple bands with large meridional property gradients in the upper waters, each associated with a deep-reaching current core. A revised nineteen-year time series (1992?2011) of altimeter data from the CNES/CLS AVISO is analyzed to ident...

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Other Authors: Orsi, Alejandro H, St?ssel, Achim, Yvon-Lewis, Shari, Bowman, Kenneth P
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
SSH
SST
SAM
ACC
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148046
id fttexasamuniv:oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/148046
record_format openpolar
spelling fttexasamuniv:oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/148046 2023-05-15T13:49:21+02:00 Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability Orsi, Alejandro H St?ssel, Achim Yvon-Lewis, Shari Bowman, Kenneth P 2013-03-14T16:11:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148046 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148046 Climate change SSH SST Southern Ocean eddy SAM ENSO fronts ACC Thesis 2013 fttexasamuniv 2014-03-30T10:50:51Z The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is well known for its multiple bands with large meridional property gradients in the upper waters, each associated with a deep-reaching current core. A revised nineteen-year time series (1992?2011) of altimeter data from the CNES/CLS AVISO is analyzed to identify and trace the spatial distribution of ACC fronts. Specific contours of sea surface height (SSH) are selected within narrow continuous bands of relative maxima SSH slope in the Southwest Atlantic Ocean sector, where they closely follow the distribution of ACC fronts derived from inspection of concurrent high-resolution profile data at hydrographic stations. When applied to the full circumpolar belt, the frontal distribution derived from these new altimeter-based indicators also agrees well with the traces of current jets and in-situ dynamic height fields calculated from concurrent Argo profile data. The temporal variability of ACC fronts is analyzed in relation to dominant modes of atmospheric forcing variability in the Southern Ocean. All three ACC fronts have experienced large seasonal to decadal variability throughout the satellite altimetry era. The general seasonal tendency for each of these jets, with respect to long-term mean positions, is to be located farther to the south during the austral summer and to north in the winter. Circumpolar-mean annual frontal locations show a consistent linear trend of southward migration. However, the estimated decadal variability of the frontal distributions is highly localized, and due to selective response mechanisms to atmospheric variability. A persistent poleward drift of ACC fronts is observed in the Indian sector consistent with increasing sea surface temperature trends. In contrast, a vacillation in the meridional location of ACC fronts is observed in the Pacific sector in association to minor sea surface cooling trends. Therefore, unlike in the Indian sector, the regional Pacific Ocean response is significantly sensitive to dominant atmospheric forcing indices. Mesoscale eddies derived from instabilities at strong current cores are successfully identified with specific SSH gradient criteria. The new estimates of rings population in the Southern Ocean are tightly linked to interannual to decadal atmospheric variability. Increased number of mesoscale eddies correlate with positive SAM forcing about two years earlier, or negative ENSO forcing two to three months earlier. These cross-correlations might explain a prominent peak in rings abundance estimated during 2000 and 2001, and the short-lived maximum that appeared in 2010. There are no persistent trends in the estimated sea surface slope across Drake Passage, and therefore neither in the transport of the ACC. High cross-correlation between the abundance of mesoscale eddies and atmospheric forcing suggests that the overall ACC system is in an eddy-saturated state. However, Drake Passage positive sea level slope anomalies were two-year lagged with negative SAM forcing and with positive ENSO events. These regional responses are characteristic of eastward-propagating signals from a buoyancy-dominated Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Drake Passage Southern Ocean Texas A&M University Digital Repository Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Austral Drake Passage Pacific Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Texas A&M University Digital Repository
op_collection_id fttexasamuniv
language unknown
topic Climate change
SSH
SST
Southern Ocean
eddy
SAM
ENSO
fronts
ACC
spellingShingle Climate change
SSH
SST
Southern Ocean
eddy
SAM
ENSO
fronts
ACC
Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability
topic_facet Climate change
SSH
SST
Southern Ocean
eddy
SAM
ENSO
fronts
ACC
description The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is well known for its multiple bands with large meridional property gradients in the upper waters, each associated with a deep-reaching current core. A revised nineteen-year time series (1992?2011) of altimeter data from the CNES/CLS AVISO is analyzed to identify and trace the spatial distribution of ACC fronts. Specific contours of sea surface height (SSH) are selected within narrow continuous bands of relative maxima SSH slope in the Southwest Atlantic Ocean sector, where they closely follow the distribution of ACC fronts derived from inspection of concurrent high-resolution profile data at hydrographic stations. When applied to the full circumpolar belt, the frontal distribution derived from these new altimeter-based indicators also agrees well with the traces of current jets and in-situ dynamic height fields calculated from concurrent Argo profile data. The temporal variability of ACC fronts is analyzed in relation to dominant modes of atmospheric forcing variability in the Southern Ocean. All three ACC fronts have experienced large seasonal to decadal variability throughout the satellite altimetry era. The general seasonal tendency for each of these jets, with respect to long-term mean positions, is to be located farther to the south during the austral summer and to north in the winter. Circumpolar-mean annual frontal locations show a consistent linear trend of southward migration. However, the estimated decadal variability of the frontal distributions is highly localized, and due to selective response mechanisms to atmospheric variability. A persistent poleward drift of ACC fronts is observed in the Indian sector consistent with increasing sea surface temperature trends. In contrast, a vacillation in the meridional location of ACC fronts is observed in the Pacific sector in association to minor sea surface cooling trends. Therefore, unlike in the Indian sector, the regional Pacific Ocean response is significantly sensitive to dominant atmospheric forcing indices. Mesoscale eddies derived from instabilities at strong current cores are successfully identified with specific SSH gradient criteria. The new estimates of rings population in the Southern Ocean are tightly linked to interannual to decadal atmospheric variability. Increased number of mesoscale eddies correlate with positive SAM forcing about two years earlier, or negative ENSO forcing two to three months earlier. These cross-correlations might explain a prominent peak in rings abundance estimated during 2000 and 2001, and the short-lived maximum that appeared in 2010. There are no persistent trends in the estimated sea surface slope across Drake Passage, and therefore neither in the transport of the ACC. High cross-correlation between the abundance of mesoscale eddies and atmospheric forcing suggests that the overall ACC system is in an eddy-saturated state. However, Drake Passage positive sea level slope anomalies were two-year lagged with negative SAM forcing and with positive ENSO events. These regional responses are characteristic of eastward-propagating signals from a buoyancy-dominated Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean.
author2 Orsi, Alejandro H
St?ssel, Achim
Yvon-Lewis, Shari
Bowman, Kenneth P
format Thesis
title Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability
title_short Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability
title_full Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability
title_fullStr Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability
title_full_unstemmed Antarctic Circumpolar Current System and its Response to Atmospheric Variability
title_sort antarctic circumpolar current system and its response to atmospheric variability
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148046
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Austral
Drake Passage
Pacific
Indian
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Austral
Drake Passage
Pacific
Indian
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Drake Passage
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Drake Passage
Southern Ocean
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148046
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