Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation

Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation

Special Issue—Bathymetry from Space Seafloor Topography and Ocean Circulation Sarah T. Gille Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering University of California at San Diego • La Jolla, California USA This article has been published in Oceanography, Volume 1 Volume This article in Oceanography, has been published 5912 LeMay Road, Rockville, MD 20851-2326, USA. Road, 5912 LeMay The Oceanography machine, reposting, or other means without prior authorization of portion photocopy of this articleof any by E. Joseph Metzger Naval Research Laboratory, Stennis Space Center • Mississippi USA Robin Tokmakian Naval Postgraduate School • Monterey, California USA Introduction Seafloor topography influences ocean circulation constant f/H, where f is the Coriolis parameter and H in two basic ways. First, it steers ocean flows. Second, represents ocean depth. Barotropic theory is often sup- it provides barriers that prevent deep waters from mix- ported by observations. For example, floats in the ing, except within deep passageways that connect Atlantic and Pacific Oceans preferentially spread along ocean basins or in hydraulically controlled overflow f/H contours rather than across them, indicating that 7 , Number regions. This paper explores the impact of both of these flow responds to topography (LaCasce, 2000). processes on ocean circulation. The examples high- In reality, because the ocean is stratified, and veloc- 1 lighted here were among the broad range of topics ities tend to be faster near the ocean surface than at mid- , a quarterly journal of The Oceanography Society. Copyright 2003 by The Oceanography Society. All rights reserved.Reproduction Society. The Oceanography 2003 by Copyright Society. The Oceanography journal, a quarterly of explored at a workshop on “Ocean Circulation, depth, flow does not literally follow contours of f/H. Bathymetry, and Climate,” held at Scripps Institution Gille (2003) used float data to examine whether of Oceanography in October 2002. Southern Ocean velocities could be assumed to be equivalent barotropic, meaning that velocities attenuate Topographic Steering with depth, with a fixed e-folding scale, Ho (Killworth, Ocean currents cannot pass through ridges or 1992). Thus velocity v(z) = v(0) exp(-z/Ho). Under this seamounts. At ocean depths that are intersected by assumption, flow is predicted to follow contours of f/Fo, topography, currents steer around major topographic where Fo = Ho(1 - exp(-H/Ho)) (e.g. Marshall, 1995; features. In addition, particularly at high latitudes, Krupitsky et al., 1996). In the limit where the e-folding where the ocean is weakly stratified, geophysical flows scale, Ho, is infinite, this is equivalent to assuming that tend to be vertically coherent (or barotropic) due to the flow follows f/H contours. Since only large-scale topo- Earth’s rotation. As a result currents near the ocean graphic features of the sea floor are expected to steer large-scale circulation, topography was smoothed to Society is strictly prohibited. Send all correspondence or Society is strictly to: [email protected], surface align in roughly the same direction as deep ocean currents, and consequently often follow con- eliminate variations with length scales less than 100 to tours of constant depth, detouring around the bumps 200 km. As illustrated in Figure 2, Gille (2003) found and troughs in the seafloor (e.g., Schulman, 1975). Most that in the Southern Ocean the equivalent barotropic major currents respond to sea floor topography. The model explains the largest fraction of variance in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), the Gulf flow data when an e-folding depth of about 700 m is Stream, and the Kuroshio Extension all steer around assumed. This is consistent with other analyses of the ridges and seamounts. Figure 1 shows estimates of the Southern Ocean that have suggested that velocities paths of the Subantarctic and Polar Fronts, the two decrease with e-folding scales between 500 and 1000 m, major jets that comprise the ACC, superimposed over depending on position within the ACC and computa- the seafloor topography of the Southern Ocean. The tion method (e.g., Karsten and Marshall, 2002). fronts flow to the south of the Campbell Plateau near Research using the Naval Research Laboratory New Zealand, and through the Eltanin and Udintsev (NRL) Layered Ocean Model (NLOM) has shown the Fracture Zones in the central Pacific Ocean. Just down- influence of abyssal layer flow on the upper ocean in stream of Drake Passage, around 60°W, they veer numerical simulations. Hurlburt and Metzger (1998) northward around the ridges of the Scotia Arc (Gordon demonstrated how topographically steered mean et al., 1978; Gille, 1994). abyssal currents can steer upper ocean currents as the To the extent that oceanographic flows are strictly Kuroshio Extension bifurcates in the vicinity of the barotropic, they should be steered along contours of Shatsky Rise (158°E, 33°N). Surface currents can bend Oceanography • Vol. 17 • No. 1/2004 47 1.8 2o smoothing 3o smoothing 4o smoothing 1.7 (radians) 1.57 1.6 1.56 separation angle σ 1.55 0 250 500 750 1000 1.5 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 Ho (m) Figure 2. Standard deviation of angular separation between float velocities and direction of mean f/Fo contours, as a function of e-folding scale Ho, where Fo = Ho(1 - exp(-H/Ho)). Solid, dashed, and dotted lines cor- respond to different degrees of filtering applied to topog- raphy. The inset enlarges the standard deviations for low Ho to show the minimum around 700 m. From Gille (2003). Figure 1. Paths of the Subantarctic (to the north) and Polar Fronts of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, superimposed over Smith and Sandwell (1997) seafloor topography. Updated from Gille (1994). contribute to the separation of the East Korean Warm Current (EKWC) near 37° – 38°N as a result of the upper ocean-topographic coupling described above. These results demonstrate that the bottom topography in the direction of the abyssal currents. This is particu- in this region is critical for the EKWC to separate from larly noticeable for northward and southward mean- the coast at these latitudes. An experiment that ders of zonal currents. Hurlburt and Thompson (1980, removed the ridge near 39°N, 130°E eliminated the 1982) used the continuity equation in a two-layer offshore abyssal steering and consequently changed model to show in a very clear and direct fashion how the separation latitude of the EKWC as shown in abyssal currents can steer upper ocean currents, espe- Figure 3. cially where they intersect at large angles. In a multi- The mean pathways of major current systems can layer case, the argument formally breaks down, but the also be significantly affected by accurate topographic steering effect remains in situations where the information. Metzger and Hurlburt (2001) studied this barotropic and first baroclinic modes are dominant, in the vicinity of Luzon Strait, which connects the such as in western boundary currents or in the ACC, Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea (SCS). As the and the flow can be approximated by two layers North Equatorial Current bifurcates along the east coast (Hurlburt and Metzger, 1998). of the Philippines, the northward branch forms the Hogan and Hurlburt (2000) described an example beginning of the Kuroshio. Upon entering Luzon Strait, of upper ocean-topographic coupling using 1/8° – the Kuroshio intrudes westward into the SCS before 1/64° Japan/East Sea versions of NLOM. They noted retroflecting and continuing its poleward journey along that 1/32° horizontal resolution is required to produce the east coast of Taiwan. Using a 1/16° Pacific Ocean baroclinically unstable surface currents. At that reso- version of NLOM, the authors found that the westward lution, baroclinic instability is very efficient at trans- extent of Kuroshio intrusion is highly dependent upon ferring energy from the upper layers to the abyssal the accuracy of the coastline geometry of the island layer where the currents are constrained to follow the chain within Luzon Strait. Two small-scale shoals were contours of the bottom topography. The result is a pro- found to have a significant blocking effect on the found change in abyssal circulation compared to the Kuroshio. Inclusion of the shoals had two effects on coarser resolution simulations. In particular, the eddy- NLOM. First, they narrowed Luzon Strait and thus driven deep mean flows are much stronger and occur reduced the westward bending (a result consistent with over most of the basin. A southward abyssal Li et al. (1996)). Second, more importantly, they deflect- flow along the coast of Korea and an anticyclonic ed the inflow angle making it more northward, thus abyssal circulation around a ridge near 39°N, 130°E reducing the westward intrusion as shown in Figure 4. Oceanography • Vol. 17 • No. 1/2004 48 The NLOM simulation with the more accurate coastline Impact of Topography on Separation geometry agrees more closely with the observational Latitude of East Korean Warm Current evidence of Qu (2000) and Liang et al. (2003). Given the importance of very small-scale features in determining the pathways of major ocean currents, 40N accurate representation of sea floor topography is cru- cial when doing high horizontal resolution ocean modeling. Unfortunately, most of today’s topographic databases do not adequately resolve small-scale fea- 38N tures. In the case of the island chain within Luzon Strait, significant hand editing using navigational charts from the Defense Mapping Agency was required to obtain realistic coastlines. Thus, higher res- 36N unmodified bottom topography olution global bathymetry is needed. 1/32˚ SURFACE 1/32˚ ABYSSAL Flow Through Ridges and Gaps Topography matters not only because it steers 40N ocean flows, but also because it inhibits or enhances the mixing and transport of waters from different regions.

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