Oceanography Ch. 7
What is Western Intensification and why does it happen?
An increase in speed of geostrophic currents as they move along the western boundary of an ocean basin. This is because the slope of the water is steeper on the western side.
What is Geostropic flow
Horizontal flow of water when there is a balance between gravity and the coriolis effect
Describe the North Atlantic Oscillation. What effect does it have on Europe's climate?
A pool of cold water circulating around the northern Atlantic. Harsh winters.
How does the Antarctic Circumpolar Current flow all the way around Antarctica?
There is no land in its pathway
What is a water type?
A Body of water identified by a specific range of temperature and salinity.
What is a water mass?
A Body of water with similar patterns of temperature and salinity from surface to depth
What is an ocean gyre? How does it form?
A Circular movement of water. (larger scale than eddies) Trade winds causes water current from east to west on either side of the equator, then deflected away from the equator until the westerlies move the current from the west back to the east and are then deflected toward the equator.
What is an Eddie? How does it form?
A Pocket of water moving in a circular motion. (smaller scale than gyre) when fast moving currents run into slower currents they displace the slower water and begin to spin
What is a mixed layer?
A Surface layer tens of meters thick with relatively constant temperature.
What is a halocine?
A Water layer with large change in salinity with depth.
What is the Doppler effect?
A change in the observed frequency of a sound wave caused by currents flowing toward or away from the observation point. (noise difference when an ambulance goes past you)
Geostrophic Flow
Horizontal flow of water when there is a balance between gravitational forces and the coriolis effect.
What is the relationship between density and temperature? Between density and salinity?
As temperature decreases, density increases (until it begins to freeze); as salinity increases density increases.
Water Type
Body of water identified by a specific range of temperature and salinity.
Water Mass
Body of water with similar patterns of temperature and salinity from surface to depth.
Drift Bottle
Bottle released at sea used to study currents.
Name at least 3 methods to measure ocean currents? How do they work?
Buoys: drift with the current and signal their position Current meter: stationary, they measure speed and direction as water moves past. Drift bottle: bottle released to float along current
Gyre
Circular movement of water. (larger scale than eddies)
What is surface divergence? Convergence?
Convergence: Surface waters driven together by wind, results in downwelling. Divergence: Surface waters driven away from a center, results in upwelling
What is the Ekman spiral and Ekman transport?
Ekman spiral: Wind creates a surface current that spirals in a clockwise direction as depth decreases, flowing in the opposite direction of the wind at about 100m depth. (spiral is in the opposite direction in the southern hemisphere) Ekman transport: Net movement of water in right angle directions to the wind
Thermocline
Extends from bottom of mixed layer to 1000m deep, temperature drastically changes with depth.
Western Intesification
Increase in speed of geostrophic currents as they move along the western boundary of an ocean basin.
Name the currents that make up each of the five major ocean gyres. Which ones are the western boundary currents and which ones are the eastern boundary currents?
Indian ocean gyre (counterclockwise): South equatorial current, Agulhas current (western boundary), West Australia current (eastern boundary) North Pacific ocean gyre (clockwise): North equatorial current, North Pacific current, Kuroshio current (western boundary), California current (eastern boundary) South Pacific ocean gyre (counterclockwise): South equatorial current, East Australian current (western boundary), Peru current (eastern boundary) North Atlantic ocean gyre (clockwise): North equatorial current, North Atlantic current, Gulf stream (western boundary) Canary current (eastern boundary) South Atlantic ocean gyre (counterclockwise): South equatorial current, Brazil current (western boundary) Benguela current (eastern boundary)
What and where are the 5 major ocean gyres?
Indian ocean gyre, north and south Pacific gyres, north and south Atlantic gyres.
Current Meter
Instrument that measures speed and direction of a current.
How does temperature generally vary with depth?
It decreases
What is the Great Ocean Conveyor Belt? How does it form? What path does it take?
It represents the overall effect of the mass movement of warm and cold water on the vertical circulation in the ocean. The formation and sinking of dense water at polar latitudes is considered to start it. Roughly follows gyres at surface, beneath generally from the poles where it is formed to the equator Describe the Pacific
What is the thermocline?
Layer that extends from bottom of mixed layer to 1000m deep, temperature drastically changes with depth.
Caballing
Mixing of two different water types, creates a water type with greater density than either of the original water types and thus sinks.
How does changing the width of a current affect its speed?
Narrow currents move faster than wide currents. Same amount of water flow, just forced through a smaller area.
Ekman Transport
Net movement of water in right angle directions to the wind.
Describe the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and its causes.
North-south current shift, associated with changes in atmospheric pressure and climate shifts.
Arctic and Antarctic Convegence
Permanent zone of convergence at about 50°N and S
Eddies
Pockets of water moving in a circular motion.
What is upwelling?
Rising of water, caused by a decrease in density
Langmuir Cells
Shallow wind-driven circulation.
What are Langmuir cells? How do they form?
Shallow wind-driven circulation. They are formed by convergence zones that create helixes of moving water along the convergence line.
Downwelling Zones
Sinking of water, caused by an increase in its density
What is downwelling?
Sinking of water, caused by an increase in its density.
Ekman Layer
Surface layer of water that contains the Ekman spiral
Mixed Layer
Surface layer tens of meters thick with relatively constant temperature.
Divergence
Surface waters driven away from a center, results in upwelling
What is surface divergence?
Surface waters driven away from a center, results in upwelling.
Convergence
Surface waters driven together by wind, results in downwelling.
What is surface convergence?
Surface waters driven together by wind, results in downwelling.
What unit of measurement is used for current volume transport? What is its value in cubic meters?
The Sverdrup (Sv) equal to about 1 million cubic meters per second
What are the 5 major zones of convergence?
The tropical convergence at the equator, the two subtropical convergences at about 30°-40°N and S, and The Arctic and Antarctic convergences at about 50°N and S
How can Ekman transport generate coastal upwelling? Downwelling?
The water moves at 90° angles to the wind so when it blows parallel to the coast it will actually drive water away (causing upwelling) or toward the coast (causing downwelling)
How does the Equatorial countercurrent form?
Trade winds push the equatorial currents to the west accumulating water on the west side of the basin, within the doldrums where winds are calm or absent, the water flows downslope toward the east.
Thermohaline Circulation
Vertical circulation caused by changes in density, driven by variations in temperature and salinity
What is thermocline circulation?
Vertical circulation caused by changes in density, driven by variations in temperature and salinity
Explain how water types with different temperature and salinity can have the same density?
Warm water with a higher salt content can have the same density as cooler water and lower salinity
Pynocline
Water layer with large change in pressure with depth.
Halocline
Water layer with large change in salinity with depth
Ekman Spiral
Wind creates a surface current that spirals in a clockwise direction as depth decreases, flowing in the opposite direction of the wind at about 100m depth. (spiral is in the opposite direction in the southern hemisphere)
How fast do ocean surface currents move relative to the wind that generates them?
about 1/100
What measurements are necessary to define a current
speed and direction
Where are the three major zones of divergence?
the two tropical divergences and the Antarctic divergence
Isopycnal
uniform density
What does isopycnal mean?
uniform density
Isohaline
uniform salinity
What does isohaline mean?
uniform salinity
Isothermal
uniform temperature
What does Isothermal mean?
uniform temperature