Available potential energy in the northern hemisphere during the FGGE year

Tellus ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 526-539 ◽  
Author(s):  
KYUNG DUCK MIN ◽  
LYLE H. HORN
2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew McC. Hogg ◽  
Paul Spence ◽  
Oleg A. Saenko ◽  
Stephanie M. Downes

AbstractThe ocean’s meridional overturning circulation is closed by the upwelling of dense, carbon-rich waters to the surface of the Southern Ocean. It has been proposed that upwelling in this region is driven by strong westerly winds, implying that the intensification of Southern Ocean winds in recent decades may have enhanced the rate of upwelling, potentially affecting the global overturning circulation. However, there is no consensus on the sensitivity of upwelling to winds or on the nature of the connection between Southern Ocean processes and the global overturning circulation. In this study, the sensitivity of the overturning circulation to changes in Southern Ocean westerly wind stress is investigated using an eddy-permitting ocean–sea ice model. In addition to a suite of standard circulation metrics, an energy analysis is used to aid dynamical interpretation of the model response. Increased Southern Ocean wind stress enhances the upper cell of the overturning circulation through creation of available potential energy in the Southern Hemisphere, associated with stronger upwelling of deep water. Poleward shifts in the Southern Ocean westerlies lead to a complicated transient response, with the formation of bottom water induced by increased polynya activity in the Weddell Sea and a weakening of the upper overturning cell in the Northern Hemisphere. The energetic consequences of the upper overturning cell response indicate an interhemispheric connection to the input of available potential energy in the Northern Hemisphere.


Among the interactions of two discrete baroclinic geostrophic vortices in a two-layer system there is one class of interaction that is non-trivial; when the two vortices are of opposite sign and in different layers, and close enough together, they transport heat. Because this particular interaction can transport heat, we propose to call it the heton. It is a tilted baroclinic pair. In the Northern Hemisphere it transports heat to the left of the direction toward which its top tilts. Two warm or two cold hetons repel one another when outside the radius of deformation. A warm and a cold heton attract one another. A simple two-heton engine that exhibits vortex splitting, loss of available potential energy, and meridional heat transport is presented.


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (6) ◽  
pp. 1098-1112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan Wang ◽  
Lifeng Zhang ◽  
Jun Peng ◽  
Yun Zhang ◽  
Tongfeng Wei

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