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Impact of isopycnal mixing on the tropical ocean circulation

Impact of isopycnal mixing on the tropical ocean circulation
Impact of isopycnal mixing on the tropical ocean circulation
The sensitivity of tropical ocean dynamics to the ocean lateral mixing orientation is explored using a z-coordinate climate-type ocean general circulation model. Compared to a simulation using horizontal mixing on both tracers and dynamics (HOR), a rotation of the tracer tensor in which mixing occurs along isopycnals (ISOT) improves the structure of the off-equatorial density field, which consequently enhances the off-equatorial circulation through geostrophy. However, the dynamics at the equator in ISOT are degraded compared to observations, as the upper part of the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC) is too deep and the South Equatorial Current (SEC) is too intense. Next, isopycnal diffusion on momentum is implemented (ISOMT). An examination of the momentum balance at the equator shows that this change in lateral diffusion direction significantly reduces the meridional diffusive flux of momentum at the top of the EUC. This intensifies the EUC, which, in turn, weakens the SEC along the equator through vertical diffusion. The equatorial degradations observed in ISOT disappear. Compared to ISOT and HOR, the separation of the two SEC branches and the equatorial current magnitude in the surface layers are much better reproduced. Moreover, in contrast to the results from ISOT and HOR, isopycnal momentum mixing allows the existence of both horizontal up-gradient and down-gradient eddy momentum fluxes, notably improving the vertical profile of the lateral viscosity term. The ISOMT experiment is therefore shown to be the closest to observations. These results suggest that isopycnal mixing should be used on both tracers and momentum to better simulate the observed eddy effects and the tropical circulation in climate models.
0148-0227
art. 3345
Lengaigne, M.
64572929-e2cd-4234-83a5-0a6281c3ff97
Madec, G.
7e2ec04b-896a-4861-b2d0-b74f39d748c2
Menkes, C.
7a30ebbe-4117-4039-a912-c94e6a40cb3e
Alory, G.
ebf458ab-2100-460f-b47e-e47b0064517d
Lengaigne, M.
64572929-e2cd-4234-83a5-0a6281c3ff97
Madec, G.
7e2ec04b-896a-4861-b2d0-b74f39d748c2
Menkes, C.
7a30ebbe-4117-4039-a912-c94e6a40cb3e
Alory, G.
ebf458ab-2100-460f-b47e-e47b0064517d

Lengaigne, M., Madec, G., Menkes, C. and Alory, G. (2003) Impact of isopycnal mixing on the tropical ocean circulation. Journal of Geophysical Research, 108 (C11), art. 3345. (doi:10.1029/2002JC001704).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The sensitivity of tropical ocean dynamics to the ocean lateral mixing orientation is explored using a z-coordinate climate-type ocean general circulation model. Compared to a simulation using horizontal mixing on both tracers and dynamics (HOR), a rotation of the tracer tensor in which mixing occurs along isopycnals (ISOT) improves the structure of the off-equatorial density field, which consequently enhances the off-equatorial circulation through geostrophy. However, the dynamics at the equator in ISOT are degraded compared to observations, as the upper part of the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC) is too deep and the South Equatorial Current (SEC) is too intense. Next, isopycnal diffusion on momentum is implemented (ISOMT). An examination of the momentum balance at the equator shows that this change in lateral diffusion direction significantly reduces the meridional diffusive flux of momentum at the top of the EUC. This intensifies the EUC, which, in turn, weakens the SEC along the equator through vertical diffusion. The equatorial degradations observed in ISOT disappear. Compared to ISOT and HOR, the separation of the two SEC branches and the equatorial current magnitude in the surface layers are much better reproduced. Moreover, in contrast to the results from ISOT and HOR, isopycnal momentum mixing allows the existence of both horizontal up-gradient and down-gradient eddy momentum fluxes, notably improving the vertical profile of the lateral viscosity term. The ISOMT experiment is therefore shown to be the closest to observations. These results suggest that isopycnal mixing should be used on both tracers and momentum to better simulate the observed eddy effects and the tropical circulation in climate models.

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Published date: 8 November 2003

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 64808
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/64808
ISSN: 0148-0227
PURE UUID: cb84a743-897e-4dcd-9d71-6282b57ddcfc

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Date deposited: 15 Jan 2009
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 12:02

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Contributors

Author: M. Lengaigne
Author: G. Madec
Author: C. Menkes
Author: G. Alory

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