atmosphere and ocean circulation Flashcards

1
Q

waht is frequency?

A

Frequency= 2 w sin latitude parameter w is the angular velocity of the earths rotation V is speed , m is mass of current or object

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2
Q

what is vorticity?

A

Vorticity: the “spin” or rotation of a parcel of water or air. Like the Coriolis force the vorticity is zero at the equator and maximum at the poles.

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3
Q

what are the types of vorticity?

A

Planetary vorticity- vector that is parallel to axis of earth’s rotation magnitude. Everything on earth, including the ocean and atmosphere rotate with it, so are subjective to planetary vorticity. Use the Coriolis parameter

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4
Q

what is relative vorticity?

A

Stirring a barrel or bear will impart an additional rotation in the beer relative to the earth. This is known a relative vorticity. Spin on a spin, additional spin. This additional spin is called the relative vorticity.

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5
Q

what is absolute vorticity?

A

Absolute vorticity: sum of relative and planetary

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6
Q

what is potential vorticity?

A

Potential vorticity: rate of rotation of a fluid column will change as the height of the column changes.

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7
Q

how does the fliud affect the rotating earth?

A

Fluid flow on a rotating earth: increased spin. If thinner, increase the spin, like a iceskater.
Rate of rotation of a fluid column will change as the height of the column changes.

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8
Q

what is the conservation of potential vorticity?

A

Conservation of potential vorticity: this covers change in depth and height, in relative vorticity and in latitude. Parcel retains rotation it has near the pole, so appears to rotate counter-clockwise. If a column of air or water moves equatorward, frequency decreases, so the spin must increase.

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9
Q

what is the rossby radius?

A

the critical length at which the Coriois force becomes important.

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10
Q

what is the Rossby?

A

ratio of the inertial force to the Coriolis force.
Ratio of the inertial force to the Coriolis force. A measure of the relative importance of these forces.
Ro= U/Lf
Velocity/ length scale x Coriolis parameter
For high rossby numbers, the effects of planetary rotation can be ignored. For small numbers, the effects of the planetary rotations dominate.

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11
Q

what dominates wind driven circulation?

A

trade winds and the westerlies

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12
Q

what is the Ekman spiral and Ekman layer?

A

• The Ekman spiral and Ekman layer processes- divergence and convergence, upwelling zones, geostrophic currents and ocean gyres.

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13
Q

what are the 3 categories of sea water motion?

A

waves, tides, ocean circulation

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14
Q

what is water mass?

A

Volumes of water that have the same properties (salinity, temperature etc) are called WATER MASS
Water masses are transported via ocean currents

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15
Q

how are water masses separated?

A

Distinct water masses are usually separated by different densities, so flow over each other in layer along density interface
As water masses flow past each other, slow mixing occur by diffusion (as its not very good), may be enhanced by turbulence and activity of eddies, this mixing increases as relative speed between layers increase
Vertical motions of water masses take place by convection as densities change

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16
Q

what are surface currents and baroclinic?

A

ften called “wind-driven currents”
Winds are the primary direct energy source for currents that flow horizontally in the ocean surface layers.
When lower levels move in different directions the situation is said to be “baroclinic”. This is if it only affects the waters and surface waters

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17
Q

what is barotropic?

A

Western boundary currents, and the Antarctic circumpolar current, may affect flow from the surface to the sea floor, moving in the same direction, this situation is said to be “barotropic”. When the surface current goes right down t the sea bed. Eg gulf streams.

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18
Q

what are the wind driven circulation inclusions?

A
  1. The frictional wind-drive currents of the thin surface layers (50-100 meters) - the frictional Ekman layer. The surface part of the ocean which is directly affected by the wind. Direct
    1. The part of the geostrophic flow from the surface to the ocean bottom which is driven, indirectly, by the wind stress. Indirect
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19
Q

what is deep water circulation (thermohaline circulation)?

A

Movement of water masse sin the deep layers of the oceans are caused by differences in the density of the water masses controlled by temperature and salinity variation.

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20
Q

what is pycnocline?

A

Gradients in properties. Creates interface pycnocline. At low and mid latitudes get permanent pycnocline. At mid and temperate latitudes, strong summer heating creates a seasonal thermocline, that separates a mixed later from a deep layer.

21
Q

what is langmuir circulation?

A

as the rings get stronger, the wind gets stronger. Streaks near a oil thing in the sea, are because of the bubbles causing lines in the water.

22
Q

what is the generation of currents?

A

When the wind blows across the ocean surface, energy is transferred from the wind to the surface water
The surface layer of the water is set in motion, the surface layer transfers its kinetic energy downwards progressively from layer to layer by friction.

23
Q

why do currents continue?

A

Once current motion has been started, it will continue after the wind stops blowing because the water has momentum. Currents created by winds can flow from long after the winds stop because:

24
Q

why does the sea surface slope when the wind stops?

A

The frictional forces between moving layers of water is small and while they blow, wind causes the sea surface to be sloped and the slope remains when the wind stops blowing.

25
Q

how does a horizontal pressure gradient form?

A

Under the sloped sea surface, a horizontal pressure gradient forms
The pressure gradient causes the water to flow from high to low pressure to restore the surface to a flat horizontal plane. These flows are detected by the Coriolis effect

26
Q

Once set in motion, the direction and speed of any current are modified by friction and what three other factors?

A
  1. Deflection by the Coriolis effect
    1. Blocking and deflection of current flow by coasts
    2. The presence of horizontal pressure gradient.
27
Q

what did Nansen find on his exhibition in 1890s?

A

Fridtjof Nansen, on his artic expedition in the 1890s, noticed that drifting ice did not move in the direction of the wind. Instead, it moved in a direction of about 20 degrees to 40, to right of the wind.

28
Q

why doesnt the surface current differ from the direction of the wind?

A

The surface current that carried drifting ice does not flow in the direction of the wind because it is deflected by the Coriolis effect. Icebergs don’t move in the same direction to the wind.

29
Q

how does each layer of water drive the layer below?

A

The surface water set in motion, the water below it, and each layer sets the layer below in motion. Each layer of water is driven by the layer above. The speed decreases with depth, and the direction of flow of each layer is deflected by the Coriolis effect.
Fully formed only under ideal conditions (wind must blow at constant speed for a day or 2 and water depth must not be shallow).

30
Q

what is the speed of the Ekman layer?

A

At the base of Ekman layer, the current speed is about 4% of the surface current speed.

31
Q

what does Ekamans theory predict about the surface laters?

A

Ekman’s theory predicts the surface layer will flow at 45 degrees to the wind. Under normal conditions, deflection less and the spiral not fully developed.

32
Q

what is a permanent pycnocline?

A

Permanent pycnocline- in low and mid-latitudes in the open ocean a permanent pycnocline is present with upper boundaries usually at depths of 100-150 m.

33
Q

what is divergence?

A

Divergence: upwelling- convergence: downwelling. Northern hemisphere- variations in an eastward wind. Ekman transport is southward, to the right of the wind. When wind is blowing, its strongest in the middle and weakest at the side. The deflection increases. Water has to come in to fill the gap. This is divergence.

34
Q

what is equatorial upwelling?

A

Equatorial upwelling: trade winds cause flow to north in N hem, and flow to the south in a S. Hem. This results in divergence and upwelling. If they crash into each other, it causes convergence.

35
Q

what does equatorial upwelling generate?

A

Equatorial upwelling: generates equatorial cold tongue. Trade winds coming down, they result in divergence, deflection to the right etc. Along the equator, there will be upwelling.

36
Q

what is coastal upwelling?

A

Coastal upwelling is if the wind is away from the coast. If wind is near coast, downwelling causes Ekman to go away from the shore.
Coastal upwelling of nutrients generated high productivity.

37
Q

what is geostrophic flow?

A

Geostrophic flow: works for ocean currents and wind flow. When flow is initiated on a horizontal pressure gradient, flow is deflected by the Coriolis effect. The flow is progressively deflected by Coriolis effect until the flow is aligned across the gradient, with the pressure gradient force balanced by the Coriolis effect.

38
Q

what are geostrophic currents?

A

Geostrophic currents- the larger the slope, the stronger the current. When these forces balance each other, we say we have a geostrophic balance. Currents on a “aqua planet”: circum-global geostrophic current would flow. From eat to west under the Hadley cells on each side of the equator, from the west to east at mid latitudes.

39
Q

where are geostropic gyres?

A

On present earth, continents block the E-W and W-E currents, (except around Antarctica), so they are deflected to form geostrophic gyres.

40
Q

Indian monsoon

A

SW monsoon winds drive coastal upwelling off Somalia and Oman. Upwelling of nutrients generates high productivity as seem in SeaWifs chlorophyll a.
The african monsoon:
Max rainfall coincides with lowest outgoing longwave radiation OLR due to convection and clouds.

41
Q

what are ocean eddies?

A
  • Small whirlpools.
    • Form due to instabilities, eg a shear between different water masses
    • Spin off strong currents eg gulf stream
    • Ocean eddies with radius 10-500 km are called mesoscale eddies
    • Persist on timescale of says to moths, rotate every 10-30 days
42
Q

what are ocean eddies associated with?

A

• May be associated with upwelling or downwelling

43
Q

what does ocean eddies transport?

A

• Transport properties, heat, salt, pollutants, debris

44
Q

what is the Agulhas retroflection?

A

The Agulhas current is forced back or “retroflected” due to shear with the powerful Antartic Circumpolar Current ACC.
Suppresses important return of salt water to the Atlantic. But some do get through- as eddies.
Detached like an abandoned meander.

45
Q

what is the role of eddies?

A

Agulhas leakage adverts warm, saline waters into Atlantic, mainly though Agulhas rings. This is important for deep thermohaline circulation.
Eddies are so tightly surrounded by water paths that nothing can escape.

46
Q

what have scientists found about eddies?

A

Scientist have found taht they are mathematically equivalent to black holes. The findings may help explain the spread of pollution in the worlds oceans. It could also help better determine how eddies effect ocean temperatures.

47
Q

what is Ekman transport?

A

Ekman transport- mean movement of water over all depths within the wind-driven layer is 90 degrees to the wind under ideal conditions.

48
Q

where is coastal upwelling and downwelling?

A

Coastal upwelling and downwelling- northern hemisphere. Along shore winds drive offshore flow, causes upwelling along coat, and upwelling speeds of 5-10 m per day. Sources of U.W eater, nutrient rich so fuels production.