A determination of air-sea gas exchange and upper ocean biological production from five noble gases and tritiugenic helium-3
A determination of air-sea gas exchange and upper ocean biological production from five noble gases and tritiugenic helium-3
Date
2007-09
Authors
Stanley, Rachel H. R.
Linked Authors
Person
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Citable URI
As Published
Date Created
Location
Sargasso Sea
DOI
10.1575/1912/2029
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Keywords
Gases, Rare
Biogeochemical cycles
Oceanus (Ship : 1975-) Cruise
Cape Hatteras (Ship) Cruise BATS196
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Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS200
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS201
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS202
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS203
Biogeochemical cycles
Oceanus (Ship : 1975-) Cruise
Cape Hatteras (Ship) Cruise BATS196
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS190
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS191
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS192
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS193
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS194
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS195
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS198
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS199
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS200
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS201
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS202
Weatherbird II (Ship) Cruise BATS203
Abstract
The five noble gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton, and xenon) are biologically and chemically inert, making
them ideal oceanographic tracers. Additionally, the noble gases have a wide range of solubilities and
molecular diffusivities, and thus respond differently to physical forcing. Tritium, an isotope of hydrogen, is
useful in tandem with its daughter helium-3 as a tracer for water mass ages. In this thesis, a fourteen month
time-series of the five noble gases, helium-3 and tritium was measured at the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series
Study (BATS) site. The time-series of five noble gases was used to develop a parameterization of air-sea gas
exchange for oligotrophic waters and wind speeds between 0 and 13 m s−1 that explicitly includes bubble
processes and that constrains diffusive gas exchange to ± 6% and complete and partial air injection processes
to ± 15%. Additionally, the parameterization is based on weeks to seasonal time scales, matching the
time scales of many relevant biogeochemical cycles. The time-series of helium isotopes, tritium, argon, and
oxygen was used to constrain upper ocean biological production. Specifically, the helium flux gauge technique
was used to estimate new production, apparent oxygen utilization rates were used to quantify export
production, and euphotic zone seasonal cycles of oxygen and argon were used to determine net community
production. The concurrent use of these three methods allows examination of the relationship between the
types of production and begins to address a number of apparent inconsistencies in the elemental budgets of
carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 2007
Embargo Date
Citation
Stanley, R. H. R. (2007). A determination of air-sea gas exchange and upper ocean biological production from five noble gases and tritiugenic helium-3 [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/2029