Abstract
The onshore transport of warm Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) is associated with a heat flux onto the Antarctic continental shelves and strongly contributes to Antarctic ice shelf decline. On the continental shelf of the Weddell Sea, dense water forms through interactions with sea and shelf ice and subsequently propagates down the continental slope. The descent of dense water simultaneously produces an onshore transport of CDW. Here, mesoscale eddies drive a vertical momentum flux that is necessary to overcome the potential vorticity gradient imposed by the continental slope. The resolution of current climate models, however, is too coarse to resolve the Rossby Radius of deformation at high latitudes so that eddies need to be parameterized. In an idealized model setup (MITgcm) representing the continental slope and shelf of the Weddell Sea, we show that eddy-driven shoreward CDW transport can be parameterized using the classical Gent-McWilliams and Redi (GM/Redi) parameterization for mesoscale eddies. In particular, the coarse resolution model with the GM/Redi parameterization simulates an onshore heat flux that is comparable to a high-resolution reference simulation. In contrast, no shoreward heat flux is observed without the eddy parameterization. When parameterizing eddies, the isopycnal slopes and the hydrographic mean fields also strongly improve compared to the runs without the parameterization.  We further show that the parameterization works best when the GM transfer coefficient strongly decreases over the continental slope, representing the eddy-suppressive effect of steeply sloped topography. Motivated by this observation, we propose a simple modification to the GM/Redi scheme that reduces the coefficients in the presence of sloping topography. Only this „slope-aware“ version of the GM/Redi parameterization yields coefficients suitable for the continental shelf and slope and the open ocean and produces the best fit to the high-resolution model fields. We expect this addition to also be beneficial for modelling other parts of the ocean where eddy effects are moderated by topographic slopes. We therefore discuss the application of the modified parameterization to a regional model of the Cape Darnley region, East Antarctica, where dense water flows down realistic topography and drives an onshore flow of CDW at high resolution.
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