Pangea without wall using MITgcm

DOI

The thermally driven large-scale ocean circulation is studied. We obtain a steady state ocean circulation by running the time-dependent, nonlinear model to equilibrium using restoring boundary conditions on surface temperature. This is simulated by MITgcm using a 2◦ × 2◦ spherical polar grid. We examine how this circulation relates to theories of the surface - and the abyssal circulation. These theories include the linear thermocline theory and Stommel and Arons theory. An important factor in returning the deep water to the surface, is the diapycnal mixing. Why this is important will be discussed. The reasons why and where the deep water upwells, are well debated. We find that positive vertical velocity mainly occurs at the western boundaries, where both the currents in the abyss and at the surface are strong. The simulated ocean circulation contains many of the observed currents in the world, like the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), the Kuroshio Current, the Agulhas Current and the Gulf Stream. In addition, the meridional overturning has a realistic strength.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.11582/2015.00031
Metadata Access https://search-api.web.sigma2.no/norstore-archive/oai/v1.0?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_dc&identifier=doi:10.11582/2015.00031
Provenance
Creator Denstad, Liv
Publisher Norstore Archive
Contributor Gupta, Alok Kumar
Publication Year 2015
OpenAccess true
Contact Norstore Archive
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Dataset
Discipline Atmospheric Sciences; Geosciences; Meteorology; Natural Sciences