Mid-depth Ocean Stratification: Southern Ocean eddies vs interior vertical diffusivity
Xiaoting Yang, Eli Tziperman

TL;DR
This study investigates the relative roles of Southern Ocean eddies and interior diapycnal mixing in establishing mid-depth ocean stratification, revealing that both processes are essential for the observed exponential profile.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates through simulations that both Southern Ocean eddies and interior diapycnal mixing are necessary to produce the observed exponential mid-depth stratification.
Findings
Southern Ocean eddies influence isopycnal slopes even with constant wind forcing.
Interior diapycnal mixing is crucial for the exponential shape of stratification.
Both eddies and mixing are essential for realistic mid-depth stratification.
Abstract
The mid-depth ocean stratification was fitted by Munk (1966) to an exponential profile and shown to be consistent with a vertical advective-diffusive balance. However, tracer release experiments show that vertical diffusivity in the mid-depth ocean is an order of magnitude too small to explain the observed 1 km exponential scale. Alternative mechanisms suggested that the overturning is mostly adiabatic, that interior diapycnal upwelling is negligible, and that nearly all mid-depth water upwells adiabatically in the Southern Ocean (SO). In this picture, SO eddies and wind set isopycnal slopes in the SO and therefore determine a non-vanishing mid-depth interior stratification even in the adiabatic limit. The effect of SO eddies on SO isopycnal slopes can be understood via either a marginal criticality condition or via a near-vanishing residual overturning conditions in the adiabatic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Climate variability and models · Marine and coastal ecosystems
