Abstract

Abstract The idea that basinlike dynamics may play a major role in determining the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) transport is revisited. A simple analytic model is developed to describe the relationship between the wind stress and transport. At very low-wind stress, a nonzero minimum is predicted. This is followed by two distinct dynamical regimes for stronger forcing: 1) a Stommel regime in which transport increases linearly with forcing strength; and 2) a saturation regime in which the transport levels off. The baroclinic structure of the Sverdrup flux into the Drake Passage latitude band is central to the analytic model, and the geometry of characteristics, or geostrophic contours, is key to predicting the transition between the two regimes. A robustness analysis is performed using an eddy-permitting quasigeostrophic model in idealized geometries. Many simulations were carried out in large domains across a range of forcing strengths. The simulations agree qualitatively with the analytic model, with two main discrepancies being related to zonal jet structures and to a western boundary inertial recirculation. Eddy fluxes associated with zonal jets modify the baroclinic structure and lower the saturation transport value. Inertial effects increase the transport, although this effect is mainly limited to smaller domains.

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