P. Malanotte-rizzoli et al., Water mass pathways between the subtropical and tropical ocean in a climatological simulation of the North Atlantic ocean circulation, DYNAM ATMOS, 32(3-4), 2000, pp. 331-371
A primitive equation, hydrostatic, terrain-following coordinate ocean gener
al circulation model (OGCM) is used to investigate the mean water mass path
ways from the subtropics to the tropics in the Atlantic Ocean. The OGCM is
used in a fully realistic configuration of the Atlantic, from 30 degrees S
to 65 degrees N, with realistic bathymetry. Surface forcings are provided b
y the GOADS climatology. A non-eddy-resolving numerical simulation is analy
zed with 3/4 degrees horizontal resolution and 20 terrain-following vertica
l levels,
The primary objective of this study is to assess the theoretical framework;
extending the ventilated thermocline theory to the equator in the context
of the numerical calculation, and to establish whether the predictions of a
steady-state theory can be verified in a time-dependent simulation, in whi
ch rectified seasonal effects on the time mean yearly circulation may be im
portant. The Bernoulli function is evaluated on isopycnal surfaces outcropp
ing in the subtropics in both hemispheres and floats are injected at differ
ent northern and southern latitudes. In both hemispheres, the interior flow
velocities are parallel to the Bernoulli streamlines that are significantl
y modified by inertia only very near the equator and on the Equatorial Unde
rCurrent (EUC).
In the Northern Atlantic, pathways from the subtropics to the tropics exist
for the isopycnal surfaces outcropping at 20-22 degrees N. The injected fl
oats reach the EUC following a zigzag pattern determined by the tropical cu
rrent system. It is impossible to distinguish between the western boundary
and the interior exchange windows as they are merged together forming a bro
ad exchange pathway east of the northwestward flowing North Brazil Current
(NBC). This exchange window disappears for the floats injected north of sim
ilar to 30 degrees N, and corresponding outcropping isopycnals sigma(theta)
> 25.5 kg/m(3), where only the recirculating window of the subtropical gyr
e remains.
In the Southern Atlantic, all the floats injected between 6 degrees and 15
degrees S migrate to the western boundary when they are entrained in the NB
C. There is no interior exchange window. At the equator, some are directly
entrained into the EUC, some overshoot and retroflect at similar to 8 degre
es N, then join the EUC.
As the numerical simulation is carried out under surface forcings that incl
ude the seasonal cycle, we can assess the impact of the seasonal cycle on t
he steady-state analysis. The most important effect is due to the Atlantic
Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), which in summer is strong, and produ
ces an "island" of Ekman upwelling between 10 degrees and 20 degrees N, whi
ch is reflected in the yearly mean properties. The ICTZ-induced upwelling a
nd interior stratification support a corresponding "island" of high potenti
al vorticity that penetrates in depth to all the isopycnals outcropping bet
ween 20 degrees and 25 degrees N. This high potential vorticity island crea
tes a barrier that constrains the floats injected at and north of 20 degree
s N to flow around it to reach the Equator and the EUC. (C) 2000 Elsevier S
cience B.V. All rights reserved.