Thermodynamic Controls on the Global Ocean Overturning Circulation

Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-12 This dissertation explores the fundamental relationship between the spatial distribution of air-sea flux and the structure of the ocean's Global Overturning Circulation (GOC). The GOC describes the circulation of ocean waters from the surface oc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Newsom, Emily Rose
Other Authors: Bitz, Cecilia M., Waddington, Edwin D.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/38022
Description
Summary:Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-12 This dissertation explores the fundamental relationship between the spatial distribution of air-sea flux and the structure of the ocean's Global Overturning Circulation (GOC). The GOC describes the circulation of ocean waters from the surface ocean at high latitudes to the deep and abyssal ocean, through the interior ocean, and ultimately back to ocean surface. In steady-state, this GOC persists even while the ocean density structure, which differs greatly with location, remains steady in time. To sustain the density structure, flow through the ocean must encounter sources and sinks of density at the ocean surface. The input of heat and freshwater fluxes at the surface supply the surface sources and sinks of density. Here, this thermodynamic requirement to maintain a steady state is exploited using an established framework - the Water Mass Transformation Framework - in a novel application: to arrive at a quantitative exploration of the relationship between the three-dimensional GOC and the distribution of surface heat and freshwater fluxes on global scale. This global analysis is approached in several steps. First, the downwelling branch of the GOC is explored. Specifically, the WMT framework is applied to examine how the dense water formation in the Southern Ocean relates to regional surface fluxes in a fully-coupled climate model. This study demonstrates that the surface processes mediating heat loss from the ocean have a fundamental influence on how dense water is circulated through the Southern Ocean. In the following study, the upwelling branch of the GOC (required to compensate for the formation of dense waters at polar surfaces) is considered. Specifically, to complete an overturning circulation, dense waters must form at the surface, circulate downward, and then return to the surface in a manner that maintains a steady global density structure. This study explores, from a theoretical perspective, how water can circulate between regions of the ocean ...