Diagnosing water mass formation from air-sea fluxes and surface mixing

Citation
Ajg. Nurser et al., Diagnosing water mass formation from air-sea fluxes and surface mixing, J PHYS OCEA, 29(7), 1999, pp. 1468-1487
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences","Earth Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
ISSN journal
00223670 → ACNP
Volume
29
Issue
7
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1468 - 1487
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3670(199907)29:7<1468:DWMFFA>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
The formation rate of water masses and its relation to air-sea fluxes and i nterior mixing are examined in an isopycnic model of the North (and tropica l) Atlantic that includes a mixed layer. The diagnostics follow Walin's for mulation. linking volume and potential density budgets for an isopycnol lay er. The authors consider the balance between water mass production. mixing, and air-sea fluxes in the model in the context of two limit cases: (i) with no mixing, where air-sea fluxes drive water mars formation directly, and (ii) a steady state in a closed basin, where air-sea fluxes are balanced by dif fusion. In such a steady state, since mixing always acts to reduce density contrast, surface forcing must act to increase it. Considered over the whole basin, including the Tropics, the model is in ste ady state apart from the densest layers, Most of the mixing is achieved by diapycnal diffusion in the strong density gradients within upwelling region s in the Tropics, and by entrainment into the tropical mixed layer. Mixing from entrainment associated with the seasonal cycle of mixed layer depth in mid and high latitudes and lateral mixing of density within the mixed lave r are less important than this tropical mixing. These model results as to t he relative importance of the different mixing processes are consistent wit h a simple scaling analysis. Outside the Tropics, the upwelling-linked mixing is no longer important, an d a first-order estimate of water mass formation rates may be made from the surface fluxes. Lateral mixing of density within the mixed layer and seaso nal entrainment mixing are as important as the remaining thermocline mixing within this domain, An apparent vertical diffusivity is diagnosed over both the full and extrat ropical domain. It reaches 10 (4) m(2) s(-1) for the denser waters. about f our times as large as the explicit diapycnal diffusion within the thermocli ne.