The WOCE–era 3–D Pacific Ocean circulation and heat budget
The WOCE–era 3–D Pacific Ocean circulation and heat budget
Date
2009-08-17
Authors
Macdonald, Alison M.
Mecking, Sabine
Toole, John M.
Robbins, Paul E.
Johnson, Gregory C.
Wijffels, Susan E.
Talley, Lynne D.
Cook, Margaret F.
Mecking, Sabine
Toole, John M.
Robbins, Paul E.
Johnson, Gregory C.
Wijffels, Susan E.
Talley, Lynne D.
Cook, Margaret F.
Linked Authors
Person
Person
Person
Person
Person
Alternative Title
Citable URI
As Published
Date Created
Location
DOI
Related Materials
Replaces
Replaced By
Keywords
Pacific
Ocean circulation
Overturn
Vertical advection
Vertical mixing
Heat transport
Heat budget
Ocean circulation
Overturn
Vertical advection
Vertical mixing
Heat transport
Heat budget
Abstract
To address questions concerning the intensity and spatial structure of the 3–dimensional
circulation within the Pacific Ocean and the associated advective and diffusive property flux
divergences, data from approximately 3000 high–quality hydrographic stations collected on
40 zonal and meridional cruises have been merged into a physically consistent model. The
majority of the stations were occupied as part of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment
(WOCE), which took place in the 1990s. These data are supplemented by a few pre–WOCE
surveys of similar quality, and time–averaged direct–velocity and historical hydrographic
measurements about the equator.
An inverse box model formalism is employed to estimate the absolute along–isopycnal
velocity field, the magnitude and spatial distribution of the associated diapycnal flow and
the corresponding diapycnal advective and diffusive property flux divergences. The resulting
large–scale WOCE Pacific circulation can be described as two shallow overturning cells
at mid– to low latitudes, one in each hemisphere, and a single deep cell which brings abyssal
waters from the Southern Ocean into the Pacific where they upwell across isopycnals and
are returned south as deep waters. Upwelling is seen to occur throughout most of the basin
with generally larger dianeutral transport and greater mixing occurring at depth. The derived
pattern of ocean heat transport divergence is compared to published results based
on air–sea flux estimates. The synthesis suggests a strongly east/west oriented pattern of
air–sea heat flux with heat loss to the atmosphere throughout most of the western basins,
and a gain of heat throughout the tropics extending poleward through the eastern basins.
The calculated meridional heat transport agrees well with previous hydrographic estimates.
Consistent with many of the climatologies at a variety of latitudes as well, our meridional
heat transport estimates tend toward lower values in both hemispheres.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Progress In Oceanography 82 (2009): 281-325, doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2009.08.002.