John Marshall

Professor of Ocean and Climate Science

Direct Estimate of Lateral Eddy Diffusivity Upstream of Drake Passage

Direct Estimate of Lateral Eddy Diffusivity Upstream of Drake Passage.

(Tulloch, Ross; Ferrari, Raffaele; Jahn, Oliver; Klocker, Andreas; LaCasce, Joseph; Ledwell, James; Marshall, John; Messias, Marie-Jose; Speer, Kevin; and Andrew Watson), Journal of Physical Oceanography, 2014.

Abstract

The first direct estimate of the rate at which geostrophic turbulence mixes tracers across the Antarctic Circumpolar Current is presented. The estimate is computed from the spreading of a tracer released upstream of Drake Passage as part of the Diapycnal and Isopycnal Mixing Experiment in the Southern Ocean (DIMES). The meridional eddy diffusivity, a measure of the rate at which the area of the tracer spreads along an isopycnal across the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, is 710±260 m2s−1 at 1500 m depth. The estimate is based on an extrapolation of the tracer based diffusivity using output from numerical tracers released in a 1/20th of a degree model simulation of the circulation and turbulence in the Drake Passage region. The model is shown to reproduce the observed spreading rate of the DIMES tracer and suggests that the meridional eddy diffusivity is weak in the upper kilometer of the water column with values below 500 m2s−1 and peaks at the steering level, near 2 km, where the eddy phase speed is equal to the mean flow speed. These vertical variations are not captured by ocean models presently used for climate studies, but they significantly affect the ventilation of different water masses.

doi = 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0120.1