H. Ishizaki, A SIMULATION OF THE ABYSSAL CIRCULATION IN THE NORTH PACIFIC-OCEAN .1. FLOW-FIELD AND COMPARISON WITH OBSERVATIONS, Journal of physical oceanography, 24(9), 1994, pp. 1921-1939
A simulation was made of the abyssal circulation in the North Pacific
Ocean. The model covers the whole Pacific, has realistic coastal geome
try and bottom topography, and is driven by the annual mean surface wi
nd stress and the annual mean differential heating at the surface and
the southern boundary. About 6.5 Sv (Sv = 10(6)m(3) s(-1)) of bottom w
ater crosses the equator from the South to the North Pacific below 350
0 m and rises there, with 2.8 Sv of the 6.5 Sv returning to the South
Pacific in the layer between 1750 and 3250 m. The abyssal water below
1750 m is divided into three layers: the upper deep layer( 1750-3250 m
), the lower deep layer (3250-4250 m), and the bottom layer (below 425
0 m), based on the large-scale horizontal circulation pattern. In the
bottom layer, the western boundary current flows to the north without
any stagnation point, and the interior flow is essentially zonal and e
astward, especially over the gentle slope of the western flank of the
East Pacific Rise. In the upper and lower deep layers, on the other ha
nd, a single anticyclonic gyre is dominant over the whole North Pacifi
c excluding the Philippine Sea. In particular, the horizontal circulat
ion pattern in the upper deep layer can be regarded as a reversed patt
ern of the Stommel-Arons circulation, driven by the outflux from the N
orth to the South Pacific in the layer and consequent vertical shrinki
ng of the water column. The present results are compared with recent o
bservations including deep-water property distributions, trans-Pacific
hydrographic data analyses, and deep current meter records. There is
a general similarity between the simulation and observations, with som
e discrepancies, particularly in the equatorial regions.