Significance of Diapycnal Mixing Within the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation

Author:

Cimoli Laura123ORCID,Mashayek Ali4ORCID,Johnson Helen L.5ORCID,Marshall David P.3ORCID,Naveira Garabato Alberto C.6ORCID,Whalen Caitlin B.7ORCID,Vic Clément8ORCID,de Lavergne Casimir9ORCID,Alford Matthew H.2ORCID,MacKinnon Jennifer A.2ORCID,Talley Lynne D.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

2. Scripps Institution of Oceanography University of California San Diego CA La Jolla USA

3. Department of Physics University of Oxford Oxford UK

4. Department of Earth Sciences University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

5. Department of Earth Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

6. School of Ocean and Earth Science University of Southampton Southampton UK

7. Applied Physics Laboratory University of Washington WA Seattle USA

8. Laboratoire d’Océanographie Physique et Spatiale University of Brest CNRS IRD Ifremer Plouzané France

9. LOCEAN Laboratory Sorbonne Université‐CNRS‐IRD‐MNHN Paris France

Abstract

AbstractDiapycnal mixing shapes the distribution of climatically important tracers, such as heat and carbon, as these are carried by dense water masses in the ocean interior. Here, we analyze a suite of observation‐based estimates of diapycnal mixing to assess its role within the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). The rate of water mass transformation in the Atlantic Ocean's interior shows that there is a robust buoyancy increase in the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW, neutral density γn ≃ 27.6–28.15), with a diapycnal circulation of 0.5–8 Sv between 48°N and 32°S in the Atlantic Ocean. Moreover, tracers within the southward‐flowing NADW may undergo a substantial diapycnal transfer, equivalent to a vertical displacement of hundreds of meters in the vertical. This result, confirmed with a zonally averaged numerical model of the AMOC, indicates that mixing can alter where tracers upwell in the Southern Ocean, ultimately affecting their global pathways and ventilation timescales. These results point to the need for a realistic mixing representation in climate models in order to understand and credibly project the ongoing climate change.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Division of Ocean Sciences

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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