Mooring observations of air-sea heat fluxes in two Subantarctic Mode Water formation regions
Tamsitt, Veronica; Cerovečki, Ivana; Josey, Simon A.. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1683-8831; Gille, Sarah T.; Schulz, Eric. 2020 Mooring observations of air-sea heat fluxes in two Subantarctic Mode Water formation regions. Journal of Climate, 33 (7). 2757-2777. 10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0653.1
Before downloading, please read NORA policies.
Text
__filestore.soton.ac.uk_users_elc1_mydesktop_OA_Downloads_tamsitt.pdf Restricted to NORA staff only Download (6MB) |
Abstract/Summary
Wintertime surface ocean heat loss is the key process driving the formation of Subantarctic Mode Water (SAMW), but there are few direct observations of heat fluxes, particularly during winter. The Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) Southern Ocean mooring in the Southeast Pacific Ocean and the Southern Ocean Flux Station (SOFS) in the Southeast Indian Ocean provide the first concurrent, multi-year, time series of air-sea fluxes in the Southern Ocean from two key SAMW formation regions. In this work we compare drivers of wintertime heat loss and SAMW formation by comparing air-sea fluxes and mixed-layers at these two mooring locations. A gridded Argo product and the ERA5 reanalysis product provide temporal and spatial context for the mooring observations. Turbulent ocean heat loss is on average 1.5 times larger in the Southeast Indian (SOFS) than in the Southeast Pacific (OOI), with stronger extreme heat flux events in the Southeast Indian leading to larger cumulative winter ocean heat loss. Turbulent heat loss events in the Southeast Indian (SOFS) occur in two atmospheric regimes (cold air from the south or dry air circulating via the north), while heat loss events in the Southeast Pacific (OOI) occur in a single atmospheric regime (cold air from the south). On interannual timescales, wintertime anomalies in net heat flux and MLD are often correlated at the two sites, particularly when wintertime MLDs are anomalously deep. This relationship is part of a larger basin-scale zonal dipole in heat flux and MLD anomalies present in both the Indian and Pacific basins, associated with anomalous meridional atmospheric circulation.
Item Type: | Publication - Article |
---|---|
Digital Object Identifier (DOI): | 10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0653.1 |
ISSN: | 0894-8755 |
Date made live: | 10 Feb 2020 07:34 +0 (UTC) |
URI: | https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/526745 |
Actions (login required)
View Item |
Document Downloads
Downloads for past 30 days
Downloads per month over past year