Abstract

AbstractThe Sverdrup relationship when applied to the Southern Ocean suggests that some isopycnals that are deep in the eastern Pacific will shoal in the Atlantic. Cold waters surfacing in the South Atlantic at midlatitudes would be warmed by the atmosphere. The potential for water mass transformations in this region is studied by applying a three-layer planetary geostrophic model to a wide ocean basin driven by the Ekman upwelling typical of the Southern Ocean surface winds. The model uses a simple physically based parameterization of the entrainment of mass into the surface layer with zonally symmetric atmospheric surface fields to find steady-state subpolar gyre solutions. The solutions are found numerically by specifying suitable boundary conditions and integrating along characteristics. With reasonable parameter settings, transformations of more than 10 Sverdrups (Sv; 1 Sv ≡ 106 m3 s−1) of water between layers are obtained. The water mass transformations are sensitive to the strength of the wind stress curl and the width of the basin and relatively insensitive to the parameterization of the surface heat fluxes. On the western side of the basin where the cold waters are near the surface, there is a large region where there is a local balance between the Ekman pumping and the exchange of mass between layers. Simple formulas are derived for the water mass transformation rates in terms of the difference between the maximum and minimum northward Ekman transports integrated across the basin and the depths of the isopycnal layers on the eastern boundary. The relevance of the model to the Southern Ocean and the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation is briefly discussed.

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