Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean

The thermohaline stream function has previously been used to describe the ocean circulation in temperature and salinity space. In the present study, the Lagrangian thermohaline stream function is introduced and computed for northward flowing water masses in the Atlantic Ocean, using Lagrangian traje...

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Main Authors: Sara Berglund, Kristofer Döös, Jonas Nycander
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2017.1306311
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spelling doaj-9f63c657845347b28f8f28c7899de4832020-11-24T22:06:50ZengTaylor & Francis GroupTellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography1600-08702017-01-0169110.1080/16000870.2017.13063111306311Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic OceanSara Berglund0Kristofer Döös1Jonas Nycander2Stockholm UniversityStockholm UniversityStockholm UniversityThe thermohaline stream function has previously been used to describe the ocean circulation in temperature and salinity space. In the present study, the Lagrangian thermohaline stream function is introduced and computed for northward flowing water masses in the Atlantic Ocean, using Lagrangian trajectories. The stream function shows the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean, where warm and saline water is converted to cold and fresh as it flows from $ 17^{\circ } \text{ S} $ to $ 58^{\circ } \text{ N} $. By analysing the Lagrangian divergence of heat and salt flux, the conversion of temperature is found to take place in the Gulf Stream, the upper flank of the North Atlantic subtropical gyre and in the North Atlantic Drift, whereas the conversion of salinity rather occurs over a narrower band in the same regions. Thus, conversions of temperature and salinity as shown by the Lagrangian thermohaline stream function are confined to the same regions in the domain. The study of a specific, representative trajectory shows that, in the absence of air–sea interactions, a mixing process leads to the conversion of temperature and salinity from warm and saline to cold and fresh, and that this process is confined to the North Atlantic subtropical gyre. However, to define and to understand this process, further investigation is needed.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2017.1306311thermohalinesubtropical gyremixingConveyor BeltTRACMASS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara Berglund
Kristofer Döös
Jonas Nycander
spellingShingle Sara Berglund
Kristofer Döös
Jonas Nycander
Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean
Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
thermohaline
subtropical gyre
mixing
Conveyor Belt
TRACMASS
author_facet Sara Berglund
Kristofer Döös
Jonas Nycander
author_sort Sara Berglund
title Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean
title_short Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean
title_full Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean
title_fullStr Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean
title_sort lagrangian tracing of the water–mass transformations in the atlantic ocean
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Tellus: Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography
issn 1600-0870
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The thermohaline stream function has previously been used to describe the ocean circulation in temperature and salinity space. In the present study, the Lagrangian thermohaline stream function is introduced and computed for northward flowing water masses in the Atlantic Ocean, using Lagrangian trajectories. The stream function shows the water–mass transformations in the Atlantic Ocean, where warm and saline water is converted to cold and fresh as it flows from $ 17^{\circ } \text{ S} $ to $ 58^{\circ } \text{ N} $. By analysing the Lagrangian divergence of heat and salt flux, the conversion of temperature is found to take place in the Gulf Stream, the upper flank of the North Atlantic subtropical gyre and in the North Atlantic Drift, whereas the conversion of salinity rather occurs over a narrower band in the same regions. Thus, conversions of temperature and salinity as shown by the Lagrangian thermohaline stream function are confined to the same regions in the domain. The study of a specific, representative trajectory shows that, in the absence of air–sea interactions, a mixing process leads to the conversion of temperature and salinity from warm and saline to cold and fresh, and that this process is confined to the North Atlantic subtropical gyre. However, to define and to understand this process, further investigation is needed.
topic thermohaline
subtropical gyre
mixing
Conveyor Belt
TRACMASS
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16000870.2017.1306311
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AT kristoferdoos lagrangiantracingofthewatermasstransformationsintheatlanticocean
AT jonasnycander lagrangiantracingofthewatermasstransformationsintheatlanticocean
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