Circulation, heat, and freshwater transport at 36°N in the Atlantic
Circulation, heat, and freshwater transport at 36°N in the Atlantic
In May and June 2005, a transatlantic hydrographic section along 36°N was occupied. A velocity field is calculated using inverse methods. The derived 36°N circulation has an overturning transport (maximum in the overturning streamfunction) of 16.6 Sv (1 Sv ? 106 m3 s?1) at 1070 m. The heat transport across the section, 1.14 ± 0.12 PW, is partitioned into overturning and horizontal heat transports of 0.75 and 0.39 PW, respectively. The horizontal heat flux is set by variability at the gyre rather than by mesoscale. The freshwater flux across the section is 1.55 ± 0.18 Sv southward based on a 0.8-Sv flow from the Pacific through the Bering Strait at a salinity of 32.5 psu. The oceanic divergence of freshwater implies a net input of freshwater to the ocean of 0.75 Sv over the North Atlantic and Arctic between 36°N and the Bering Strait. Most (85%) of the recently ventilated upper North Atlantic Deep Water (water originating in the Labrador Sea) transport across the section occurs in the deep western boundary current rather than being associated with an interior pathway to the west of the mid-Atlantic ridge.
2661-2678
McDonagh, E.L.
47e26eeb-b774-4068-af07-31847e42b977
McLeod, P.
066e817b-0bbf-4f2a-8ca0-4e1308f13f17
King, B.A.
960f44b4-cc9c-4f77-b3c8-775530ac0061
Bryden, H.L.
7f823946-34e8-48a3-8bd4-a72d2d749184
Torres-Valdes, S.
3feffad6-31bb-4f77-9dc9-ff6ddb020899
December 2010
McDonagh, E.L.
47e26eeb-b774-4068-af07-31847e42b977
McLeod, P.
066e817b-0bbf-4f2a-8ca0-4e1308f13f17
King, B.A.
960f44b4-cc9c-4f77-b3c8-775530ac0061
Bryden, H.L.
7f823946-34e8-48a3-8bd4-a72d2d749184
Torres-Valdes, S.
3feffad6-31bb-4f77-9dc9-ff6ddb020899
McDonagh, E.L., McLeod, P., King, B.A., Bryden, H.L. and Torres-Valdes, S.
(2010)
Circulation, heat, and freshwater transport at 36°N in the Atlantic.
Journal of Physical Oceanography, 40 (12), .
(doi:10.1175/2010JPO4176.1).
Abstract
In May and June 2005, a transatlantic hydrographic section along 36°N was occupied. A velocity field is calculated using inverse methods. The derived 36°N circulation has an overturning transport (maximum in the overturning streamfunction) of 16.6 Sv (1 Sv ? 106 m3 s?1) at 1070 m. The heat transport across the section, 1.14 ± 0.12 PW, is partitioned into overturning and horizontal heat transports of 0.75 and 0.39 PW, respectively. The horizontal heat flux is set by variability at the gyre rather than by mesoscale. The freshwater flux across the section is 1.55 ± 0.18 Sv southward based on a 0.8-Sv flow from the Pacific through the Bering Strait at a salinity of 32.5 psu. The oceanic divergence of freshwater implies a net input of freshwater to the ocean of 0.75 Sv over the North Atlantic and Arctic between 36°N and the Bering Strait. Most (85%) of the recently ventilated upper North Atlantic Deep Water (water originating in the Labrador Sea) transport across the section occurs in the deep western boundary current rather than being associated with an interior pathway to the west of the mid-Atlantic ridge.
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Accepted/In Press date: April 2010
Published date: December 2010
Organisations:
Marine Physics and Ocean Climate
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 155991
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/155991
ISSN: 0022-3670
PURE UUID: 752ebc03-d607-40c2-8297-8424a5d6650c
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Date deposited: 28 May 2010 16:47
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:39
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Contributors
Author:
E.L. McDonagh
Author:
P. McLeod
Author:
B.A. King
Author:
S. Torres-Valdes
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