Published January 26, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The Global Overturning Circulation and the Role of Non-Equilibrium Effects in ECCOv4r4

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

We quantify the volume transport and watermass transformation rates of the global overturning circulation using the Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean version 4 release 4 (ECCOv4r4) reanalysis product. The ECCO solution shows large rates of intercell exchange between the mid-depth and abyssal cells, consistent with other recent inferences. About 10 Sv of North Atlantic deep water enters the abyssal cell in the Southern Ocean and is balanced by a similar amount of apparrent diapycnal upwelling in the Indo-Pacific. However, much of the upwelling in ECCO's deep ocean is not associated with irreversible watermass transformations, as typically assumed in theoretical models. Instead, a dominant portion of the abyssal circulation in ECCO is associated with isopycnal volume tendencies, reflecting a deep ocean in a state of change and a circulation in which transient tendencies play a leading role in the watermass budget. These volume tendencies are particularly prominent in the Indo-Pacific, where ECCO depicts a cooling and densifying deep ocean with relatively little mixing-driven upwelling, in disagreement with recent observations of deep Indo-Pacific warming trends. Although abyssal ocean observations are insufficient to exclude the trends modeled by ECCO, we note that ECCO's parameterized diapycnal mixing in the abyssal ocean is much smaller than observational studies suggest and may lead to an under-representation of Antarctic Bottom Water consumption in the abyssal ocean. Whether or not ECCO's tendencies are realistic, they are a key part of its abyssal circulation and hence need to be taken into consideration when interpreting the ECCO solution.

Data availability

The ECCO data are publicly available at https://ecco-group.org/products.htm. The analysis presented in this manuscript was done partly using the ECCOv4-py software package (https://ecco-v4-python-tutorial.readthedocs.io) under the MIT License and xarray (Hoyer & Hamman, 2017) (https://docs.xarray.dev/en/stable/) under the Apache Licesnse 2.0. Figures are plotted using the Python Package Matlplotlib 3.3.2 (Hunter, 2007), available under the Matplotlib license at https://zenodo.org/record/7527665#.Y8Gpqy2B30o. Additional analysis is done using the xmitgcm package (https://github.com/MITgcm/xmitgcm) under the MIT License. The equation of state calculation was done using the fastjmd95 python package https://zenodo.org/record/4498376#.Y8Gyoi2B30o, available as part of the xgcm package under the MIT License. Analysis scripts employed in this manuscript are publicly available at https://zenodo.org/record/7535840#.Y8H3Ei2B30o (Monkman, 2023).

Files

Global-Overturning-Circulation-and-the-Role-of-Non-Equilibrium-Effects-in-ECCOv4r4.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1029/2023JC019690
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10836

Funding

National Science Foundation
OCE-1846821

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Geophysical Sciences