Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean Climates

Abstract We present a set of idealized numerical experiments of a solstitial aquaplanet ocean and examine the thermodynamic and dynamic implications of surface gravity waves (SGWs) upon its mean state. The aquaplanet's oceanic circulation is dominated by an equatorial zonal jet and four Ekman d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joshua H. P. Studholme, Margarita Y. Markina, Sergey K. Gulev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union (AGU) 2021-06-01
Series:Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002202
id doaj-13cc4d63fa5748ad80a45160da1875bd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-13cc4d63fa5748ad80a45160da1875bd2021-07-12T10:15:32ZengAmerican Geophysical Union (AGU)Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems1942-24662021-06-01136n/an/a10.1029/2020MS002202Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean ClimatesJoshua H. P. Studholme0Margarita Y. Markina1Sergey K. Gulev2Yale University New Haven CT USAShirshov Institute of Oceanology Russian Academy of Science Moscow RussiaShirshov Institute of Oceanology Russian Academy of Science Moscow RussiaAbstract We present a set of idealized numerical experiments of a solstitial aquaplanet ocean and examine the thermodynamic and dynamic implications of surface gravity waves (SGWs) upon its mean state. The aquaplanet's oceanic circulation is dominated by an equatorial zonal jet and four Ekman driven meridional overturning circulation (MOC) cells aligned with the westerly atmospheric jet streams and easterly trade winds in both hemispheres. Including SGW parameterization (representing modulations of air‐sea momentum fluxes, Langmuir circulation, and Stokes‐Coriolis force) increases mixed layer vertical momentum diffusivity by ∼40% and dampens surface momentum fluxes by ∼4%. The correspondingly dampened MOC impacts the oceanic density structure to 1 km depth by lessening the large‐scale advective transports of heat and salt, freshening the equatorial latitudes (where evaporation minus precipitation [E − P] is negative) and increasing salinity in the subtropics (where E − P is positive) by ∼1%. The midlatitude pycnocline in both hemispheres is deepened by the inclusion of SGWs. Including SGWs into the aquaplanet ocean model acts to increase mixed layer depth by ∼10% (up to 20% in the wintertime in midlatitudes), decrease vertical shear in the upper 200 m and alter local midlatitude buoyancy frequency. Generally, the impacts of SGWs upon the aquaplanet ocean are found to be consistent across cooler and warmer climates. We suggest that the implications of these simulations could be relevant to understanding future projections of SGW climate, exoplanetary oceans, and the dynamics of the Southern Ocean mixed layer.https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002202
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua H. P. Studholme
Margarita Y. Markina
Sergey K. Gulev
spellingShingle Joshua H. P. Studholme
Margarita Y. Markina
Sergey K. Gulev
Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean Climates
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
author_facet Joshua H. P. Studholme
Margarita Y. Markina
Sergey K. Gulev
author_sort Joshua H. P. Studholme
title Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean Climates
title_short Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean Climates
title_full Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean Climates
title_fullStr Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean Climates
title_full_unstemmed Role of Surface Gravity Waves in Aquaplanet Ocean Climates
title_sort role of surface gravity waves in aquaplanet ocean climates
publisher American Geophysical Union (AGU)
series Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
issn 1942-2466
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract We present a set of idealized numerical experiments of a solstitial aquaplanet ocean and examine the thermodynamic and dynamic implications of surface gravity waves (SGWs) upon its mean state. The aquaplanet's oceanic circulation is dominated by an equatorial zonal jet and four Ekman driven meridional overturning circulation (MOC) cells aligned with the westerly atmospheric jet streams and easterly trade winds in both hemispheres. Including SGW parameterization (representing modulations of air‐sea momentum fluxes, Langmuir circulation, and Stokes‐Coriolis force) increases mixed layer vertical momentum diffusivity by ∼40% and dampens surface momentum fluxes by ∼4%. The correspondingly dampened MOC impacts the oceanic density structure to 1 km depth by lessening the large‐scale advective transports of heat and salt, freshening the equatorial latitudes (where evaporation minus precipitation [E − P] is negative) and increasing salinity in the subtropics (where E − P is positive) by ∼1%. The midlatitude pycnocline in both hemispheres is deepened by the inclusion of SGWs. Including SGWs into the aquaplanet ocean model acts to increase mixed layer depth by ∼10% (up to 20% in the wintertime in midlatitudes), decrease vertical shear in the upper 200 m and alter local midlatitude buoyancy frequency. Generally, the impacts of SGWs upon the aquaplanet ocean are found to be consistent across cooler and warmer climates. We suggest that the implications of these simulations could be relevant to understanding future projections of SGW climate, exoplanetary oceans, and the dynamics of the Southern Ocean mixed layer.
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002202
work_keys_str_mv AT joshuahpstudholme roleofsurfacegravitywavesinaquaplanetoceanclimates
AT margaritaymarkina roleofsurfacegravitywavesinaquaplanetoceanclimates
AT sergeykgulev roleofsurfacegravitywavesinaquaplanetoceanclimates
_version_ 1721307388070330368