Seasonal Change in the Upper Ocean (The Annual Cycle)
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Transcript of Seasonal Change in the Upper Ocean (The Annual Cycle)
Seasonal Change
in the Upper Ocean
(The Annual Cycle)
SST Annual Cycle Amplitude Equator: 1o-2oCMid-latitudes (40o): 5o-10oCPoleward: Reduced (melting and freezing of sea ice)Coastal region: 10o-20oC EvolutionNorthern hemisphereMaximum SST: August/SeptemberMinimum SST: February/MarchSub surface: Delayed up to 2 months.• Annual cycle decreases rapidly with depth: confined mostly above 100 little change below 200 meters
Departure of monthly climatology from climatologicalannual mean (based on CPC data, 1982-2001)
Annual range of sea-surface temperature in °C calculated from the Reynolds and Smith (1995) mean sea-surface temperature data set. Contour interval is 1°C with heavy contours at 4°C and 8°C. Shaded areas exceed 8°C.
Annual cycle of temperature in the upper layerMixed layer:In winter, SST is low, wind waves are large, mixed layer is deep (extending to the main thermocline).In summer, (SST highwater stable), mixed layer is shallow. Seasonal thermocline:seasonal thermocline develops in the upper zone in summer.high stability within the seasonal thermoclineseparate the water from upper to deeper zonescausing a “fossilized mixing zone” (water from remaining winter mixed layer)
Example: Seasonal thermocline at Ocean Weather Station “P” (50oN, 145oW)March is nearly isothermal in upper 100 meters. March-August, SST increases, (absorption of solar radiation). Mixed layer 30 m.August-March, net loss of heat, seasonal thermocline eroding due to mixing.
Seasonal change of temperature profiles at different latitudes
Growth and decay of the mixed layer and seasonal thermocline from November 1989 to September 1990 at the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Station (BATS) at 31.8°N 64.1°W. Data were collected by the Bermuda Biological Station for Research, Inc. Note that pressure in decibars is nearly the same as depth in meters (see § 6.8 for a definition of decibars).
Figure 6.8 Typical temperature and salinity profiles in the open ocean. AAC: At 62.0°S, 170.0°E in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current on 16 January 1969 as measured by the R/V Hakuho Maru. Warm Pool: At 9.5°N, 176.3°E in the tropical west Pacific warm pool on 12 March 1989 as measured by Bryden and Hall on the R/V Moana Wave. BATS: At 31.8°N, 64.1°W near Bermuda on 17 April and 10 September 1990 as measured by the Bermuda Biological Station for Research, Inc. Data are included with Java Ocean Atlas.
Temperature diurnal cycle• SST diurnal cycle: usually small(<0.4oC)• Diurnal cycle is mainly in upper 10 meters• Produce a “diurnal thermocline”• Localized higher amplitude of SST: 1oC (occasionally 3o-4oC) in regions of
high isolation + low wind, 2~3oC in shallow water along coast.
Seasonal Cycle of the Thermocline at Equatorial Atlantic Ocean
Some Examples of the Interannual Variability in Upper
Tropical Ocean
Standard deviation of SST anomalies
Fluctuations of the equatorial undercurrent and thermocline depth during 1981-1983
An example of El Niño evolution
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Tropical Atlantic
SST Anomalies
ENSO-like phenomenon is not just found in the Pacific
Anomalous event in the Indian Ocean
Image courtesy of Stepen Hare and Nathan Mantua, University of Washington, units are degrees Celsius
The Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) is a long-term ocean fluctuation of the Pacific Ocean. The PDO waxes and wanes approximately every 20 to 30 years.
And not just the tropics
And it is not just ENSO!