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Ocean Currents
Why is Ocean Circulation
       Important?
            • Transport ~ 20% of
              latitudinal heat
               – Equator to poles
            • Transport nutrients and
              organisms
            • Influences weather and
              climate
            • Influences commerce
Non-rotating Earth
                     Convection
                     cell model
Add rotation and add landmasses
unequal heating and cooling of the Earth
Physical properties of the
      atmosphere: Density
• Warm, low density
  air rises
• Cool, high density
  air sinks
• Creates circular-
  moving loop of air
  (convection cell)
Physical properties of the
  atmosphere: Water vapor
• Cool air cannot hold much water
  vapor, so is typically dry
• Warm air can hold more water
  vapor, so is typically moist
• Water vapor decreases the density
  of air
Physical properties of the
 atmosphere: Pressure
90o
      High pressure, dry climate


60o            Low pressure, wet climate
                  High pressure, dry climate
30o
                          ITCZ intertropical
0o                        convergence
                          zone= doldrums
                          Low pressure,
30o
                          wet climate

60o



90o
The Coriolis effect
• The Coriolis effect
  – Is a result of Earth’s rotation
  – Causes moving objects to follow
    curved paths:
     • In Northern Hemisphere, curvature
       is to right
     • In Southern Hemisphere, curvature
       is to left
  – Changes with latitude:
     • No Coriolis effect at Equator
     • Maximum Coriolis effect at poles
The Coriolis effect on Earth
• As Earth rotates,
  different latitudes
  travel at different
  speeds
• The change in
  speed with
  latitude causes
  the Coriolis effect
North Pole   Buffalo moves 783 mph
                       Quito moves 1036 mph


Buffalo
                                           15o


Quito                             N
                                Buffalo
 79oW

                                 Quito



          South Pole
A) Idealized winds generated by pressure gradient and Coriolis Force.
B) Actual wind patterns owing to land mass distribution..
Ocean Currents
Surface Currents
  The upper 400 meters of the ocean
  (10%).
Deep Water Currents
  Thermal currents (90%)
Surface Currents
 Forces
 1. Solar Heating (temp, density)
 2. Winds
 3. Coriolis
Wind-driven surface currents
Wind-Driven and Density-Driven
            Currents

• Wind-driven currents occur in the
  uppermost 100 m or less
• Density differences causes by
  salinity and temperature produce
  very slow flows in deeper waters.
Sailors have know about ocean
        currents for centuries
Sailors have know that ―rivers‖ flow in the
   seas since ancient times. They used
   them to shorten voyages, or were
   delayed by trying to stem them.
If navigators do not correct to deflection
   by currents, they may be far away from
   where they think they are and meet
   disaster.
Ben Franklin and the Gulf Stream
Matthew Fontaine Maury
The first systematic study
  of currents was done
  by Maury based on
  logbooks in the US
  Navy’s Depot of Charts
  and Instruments.
His charts and ―Physical
  Geography of the Sea‖
  assisted navigators
  worldwide.
                       http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/brady/gallery/97gal.html
Winds and surface water
• Wind blowing over the ocean can move
  it due to frictional drag.
• Waves create necessary roughness for
  wind to couple with water.
• One ―rule of thumb‖ holds that wind
  blowing for 12 hrs at 100 cm per sec will
  produce a 2 cm per sec current (about
  2% of the wind speed)
Top-down drag
• Wind acts only on the surface water layer.
• This layer will also drag the underlying water,
  but with less force.
• Consequently, there is a diminution of speed
  downward.
• Direction of movement is also influenced by
  the Coriolis Effect and Ekman Spiral
Ekman spiral
Ekman spiral describes
  the speed and
  direction of flow of
  surface waters at
  various depths
• Factors:
  – Wind
  – Coriolis effect
Ekman transport
Ekman transport is
  the overall water
  movement due to
  Ekman spiral
• Ideal transport is
  90º from the wind
• Transport direction
  depends on the
  hemisphere
Ekman Transport




Water flow in the Northern hemisphere- 90o to the right of the
wind direction
Depth is important
Currents in the ―Real‖ Ocean
       Currents rarely behave exactly as
  predicted by these theoretical
  explanations due to factors such as
• Depth—shallow water does not permit
  full development of the Ekman spiral
• Density—deeper currents moving in
  different directions influence the
  overlying surface movement
Geostrophic Flow
 Surface currents generally mirror average
planetary atmospheric circulation patterns
Current Gyres
Gyres are large circular-moving loops of water
    Five main gyres (one in each ocean
       basin):
       • North Pacific
       • South Pacific
       • North Atlantic
       • South Atlantic
       • Indian
    • Generally 4 currents in each gyre
    • Centered about 30o north or south
       latitude
Geostrophic flow and western
       intensification
• Geostrophic flow
  causes a hill to form
  in subtropical gyres
• The center of the
  gyre is shifted to the
  west because of
  Earth’s rotation
• Western boundary
  currents are
  intensified
                           Figure 7-7
Western intensification of
       subtropical gyres
• The western boundary currents of all
  subtropical gyres are:
  – Fast
  – Narrow
  – Deep
• Western boundary currents are also warm
• Eastern boundary currents of subtropical gyres
  have opposite characteristics
Boundary Currents in the Northern Hemisphere



Type of Current             General Features   Speed      Special Features
Western boundary Currents        warm          swift   sharp boundary
Gulf Stream, Kuroshio            narrow                w/coastal circulation,
                                 deep                  little coastal upwelling

Eastern Boundary Currents        cold          slow    diffuse boundaries
California, Canary               broad                 separating from coastal
                                 shallow               currents, coastal
                                                       upwelling common
Pacific Ocean surface currents
―Hills and Valleys‖ in the
                    Ocean balance between the
                       • A
                                            Ekman transport and
                                            Coriolis effect
                                            produces ―hills‖ in the
                                            center of the gyres and
                                            ―valleys‖ elsewhere
                                          • Gravitational effects
                                            from sea floor features
                                            also produce
                                            variations in sea
                                            surface topography

http://earth.usc.edu/~stott/Catalina/Oceans.html
What do Nike shoes,
rubber ducks, and
hockey gloves have to
do with currents?
Lost at Sea
Duckie Progress
•January 1992 - shipwrecked in the Pacific Ocean, off
the coast of China
•November 1992 - half had drifted north to the Bering
Sea and Alaska; the other half went south to
Indonesia and Australia
•1995 to 2000 - spent five years in the Arctic ice floes,
slowly working their way through the glaciers
2001 - the duckies bobbed over the place where the
Titanic had sunk
•2003 - they were predicted to begin washing up
onshore in New England, but only one was spotted in
Maine
•2007 - a couple duckies and frogs were found on the
beaches of Scotland and southwest England.
2004-2007
Barber’s Point
North Pacific Subtropical Gyre
• ―Great Pacific Garbage Patch‖

• Estimate: 46,000 pieces of floating garbage/mi2.
North Pacific Subtropical Gyre




     135° to 155°W and 35° to 42°N
North Pacific Subtropical Gyre




Great Pacific Garbage Patch- Good Morning America 2010
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLrVCI4N67M&feature=player_embedded

   http://marinedebris.noaa.gov/info/patch.html#6
Eddy
A circular movement of water formed along the edge
of a permanent current
In an average year, 10-15 rings are formed
150-300 km in diameter
Speed 1 m/sec

Warm core ring
1. Rotates clockwise
2. Found on the landward side of the current

Cold core ring (cyclonic eddy)
1. Rotates counterclockwise
2. Forms on the ocean side of the current
Sargasso Sea
Upwelling and downwelling
Vertical movement of water ()
  – Upwelling = movement of deep water to
    surface
    • Hoists cold, nutrient-rich water to surface
    • Produces high productivities and abundant
      marine life
  – Downwelling = movement of surface water
    down
    • Moves warm, nutrient-depleted surface water
      down
    • Not associated with high productivities or
      abundant marine life
upwelling




            downwelling
Langmuir Circulation
Satellite Observations
• TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason 1, and other
  satellites have observed patterns of
  change over the past few years
• Animation of seasonal and climatically-
  influence shifts available at
http://seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov/OCEAN_PLANET/MOVIES
   /Topex_Dynamic_Ocean_Topography.mpg
El Niño-Southern Oscillation
           (ENSO)
• El Niño = warm surface current in
  equatorial eastern Pacific that occurs
  periodically around Christmastime
• Southern Oscillation = change in
  atmospheric pressure over Pacific
  Ocean accompanying El Niño
• ENSO describes a combined oceanic-
  atmospheric disturbance
El Niño

• Oceanic and atmospheric
  phenomenon in the Pacific Ocean
• Occurs during December
• 2 to 7 year cycle
     Sea Surface Temperature
     Atmospheric Winds
     Upwelling
Normal conditions in the
    Pacific Ocean
El Niño conditions (ENSO
      warm phase)
La Niña conditions (ENSO
cool phase; opposite of El
          Niño)
Non El Niño   El Niño




               1997
Non El Niño


                        upwelling


                  El Niño




    thermocline
El Niño events over the last 55 years




El Niño warmings (red) and La Niña coolings (blue) since
1950. Source: NOAA Climate Diagnostics Center
World Wide Effects of El Niño

  • Weather patterns
  • Marine Life
  • Economic resources

               El Nino Animation
http://esminfo.prenhall.com/science/geoanimations/ani
mations/26_NinoNina.html
Effects of severe El Niños
Surface and Deep-Sea Current
            Interactions
Unifying concept: ―Global Ocean Conveyor Belt‖




         http://seis.natsci.csulb.edu/rbehl/ConvBelt.htm
Heat Transport by Currents
• Surface currents play significant roles in
  transport heat energy from equatorial
  waters towards the poles
• May serve as ―heat sources‖ to cooler
  overlying air, ―heat sinks‖ from warmer
• Evaporation and condensation
  participate in latent heat exchanges
Matter Transport and
        Surface Currents
• Currents also involved with gas
  exchanges, especially O2 and CO2
• Nutrient exchanges important within
  surface waters (including outflow from
  continents) and deeper waters
  (upwelling and downwelling)
• Pollution dispersal
• Impact on fisheries and other resources
Global ocean circulation that is driven by differences in
the density of the sea water which is controlled by
temperature and salinity.
White sections represent warm surface currents.
Purple sections represent deep cold currents
What effect does global
        warming play in
    thermohaline circulation?

http://www.youtube.com/v/MZbsMlr9WRI?version=3
1                    2                 3                     4


  CO2 fossil fuel      Atmospheric and     Subtropical         High latitude
  combustion           ocean temp          evaporation         precipitation & runoff



 North Atlantic
regional cooling
                    Deep water formation     Nordic seas
                    & thermohaline           salinity & deep            Potential feedback
                    circulation              convection                    of increased
                                                                          tropical salinity
                          6                         5

  Global climate
 interconnections
Inquiry

1. What is a convection cell?
2. Which direction do currents get deflected in
   the Southern Hemisphere?
3. What depth should the water be for an Ekman
   spiral to occur?
4. How are surface currents created?
5. What is a gyre?
6. How can an El Nino impact upwelling?
7. Coriolis Effect is strongest near the _____?

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Ocean currents

  • 2. Why is Ocean Circulation Important? • Transport ~ 20% of latitudinal heat – Equator to poles • Transport nutrients and organisms • Influences weather and climate • Influences commerce
  • 3. Non-rotating Earth Convection cell model
  • 4. Add rotation and add landmasses unequal heating and cooling of the Earth
  • 5. Physical properties of the atmosphere: Density • Warm, low density air rises • Cool, high density air sinks • Creates circular- moving loop of air (convection cell)
  • 6. Physical properties of the atmosphere: Water vapor • Cool air cannot hold much water vapor, so is typically dry • Warm air can hold more water vapor, so is typically moist • Water vapor decreases the density of air
  • 7. Physical properties of the atmosphere: Pressure
  • 8. 90o High pressure, dry climate 60o Low pressure, wet climate High pressure, dry climate 30o ITCZ intertropical 0o convergence zone= doldrums Low pressure, 30o wet climate 60o 90o
  • 9. The Coriolis effect • The Coriolis effect – Is a result of Earth’s rotation – Causes moving objects to follow curved paths: • In Northern Hemisphere, curvature is to right • In Southern Hemisphere, curvature is to left – Changes with latitude: • No Coriolis effect at Equator • Maximum Coriolis effect at poles
  • 10. The Coriolis effect on Earth • As Earth rotates, different latitudes travel at different speeds • The change in speed with latitude causes the Coriolis effect
  • 11. North Pole Buffalo moves 783 mph Quito moves 1036 mph Buffalo 15o Quito N Buffalo 79oW Quito South Pole
  • 12. A) Idealized winds generated by pressure gradient and Coriolis Force. B) Actual wind patterns owing to land mass distribution..
  • 13. Ocean Currents Surface Currents The upper 400 meters of the ocean (10%). Deep Water Currents Thermal currents (90%)
  • 14. Surface Currents Forces 1. Solar Heating (temp, density) 2. Winds 3. Coriolis
  • 16. Wind-Driven and Density-Driven Currents • Wind-driven currents occur in the uppermost 100 m or less • Density differences causes by salinity and temperature produce very slow flows in deeper waters.
  • 17. Sailors have know about ocean currents for centuries Sailors have know that ―rivers‖ flow in the seas since ancient times. They used them to shorten voyages, or were delayed by trying to stem them. If navigators do not correct to deflection by currents, they may be far away from where they think they are and meet disaster.
  • 18. Ben Franklin and the Gulf Stream
  • 19. Matthew Fontaine Maury The first systematic study of currents was done by Maury based on logbooks in the US Navy’s Depot of Charts and Instruments. His charts and ―Physical Geography of the Sea‖ assisted navigators worldwide. http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/brady/gallery/97gal.html
  • 20. Winds and surface water • Wind blowing over the ocean can move it due to frictional drag. • Waves create necessary roughness for wind to couple with water. • One ―rule of thumb‖ holds that wind blowing for 12 hrs at 100 cm per sec will produce a 2 cm per sec current (about 2% of the wind speed)
  • 21. Top-down drag • Wind acts only on the surface water layer. • This layer will also drag the underlying water, but with less force. • Consequently, there is a diminution of speed downward. • Direction of movement is also influenced by the Coriolis Effect and Ekman Spiral
  • 22. Ekman spiral Ekman spiral describes the speed and direction of flow of surface waters at various depths • Factors: – Wind – Coriolis effect
  • 23. Ekman transport Ekman transport is the overall water movement due to Ekman spiral • Ideal transport is 90º from the wind • Transport direction depends on the hemisphere
  • 24. Ekman Transport Water flow in the Northern hemisphere- 90o to the right of the wind direction Depth is important
  • 25. Currents in the ―Real‖ Ocean Currents rarely behave exactly as predicted by these theoretical explanations due to factors such as • Depth—shallow water does not permit full development of the Ekman spiral • Density—deeper currents moving in different directions influence the overlying surface movement
  • 26. Geostrophic Flow Surface currents generally mirror average planetary atmospheric circulation patterns
  • 27. Current Gyres Gyres are large circular-moving loops of water Five main gyres (one in each ocean basin): • North Pacific • South Pacific • North Atlantic • South Atlantic • Indian • Generally 4 currents in each gyre • Centered about 30o north or south latitude
  • 28. Geostrophic flow and western intensification • Geostrophic flow causes a hill to form in subtropical gyres • The center of the gyre is shifted to the west because of Earth’s rotation • Western boundary currents are intensified Figure 7-7
  • 29. Western intensification of subtropical gyres • The western boundary currents of all subtropical gyres are: – Fast – Narrow – Deep • Western boundary currents are also warm • Eastern boundary currents of subtropical gyres have opposite characteristics
  • 30. Boundary Currents in the Northern Hemisphere Type of Current General Features Speed Special Features Western boundary Currents warm swift sharp boundary Gulf Stream, Kuroshio narrow w/coastal circulation, deep little coastal upwelling Eastern Boundary Currents cold slow diffuse boundaries California, Canary broad separating from coastal shallow currents, coastal upwelling common
  • 31.
  • 33. ―Hills and Valleys‖ in the Ocean balance between the • A Ekman transport and Coriolis effect produces ―hills‖ in the center of the gyres and ―valleys‖ elsewhere • Gravitational effects from sea floor features also produce variations in sea surface topography http://earth.usc.edu/~stott/Catalina/Oceans.html
  • 34. What do Nike shoes, rubber ducks, and hockey gloves have to do with currents?
  • 36. Duckie Progress •January 1992 - shipwrecked in the Pacific Ocean, off the coast of China •November 1992 - half had drifted north to the Bering Sea and Alaska; the other half went south to Indonesia and Australia •1995 to 2000 - spent five years in the Arctic ice floes, slowly working their way through the glaciers 2001 - the duckies bobbed over the place where the Titanic had sunk •2003 - they were predicted to begin washing up onshore in New England, but only one was spotted in Maine •2007 - a couple duckies and frogs were found on the beaches of Scotland and southwest England.
  • 38. North Pacific Subtropical Gyre • ―Great Pacific Garbage Patch‖ • Estimate: 46,000 pieces of floating garbage/mi2.
  • 39. North Pacific Subtropical Gyre 135° to 155°W and 35° to 42°N
  • 40. North Pacific Subtropical Gyre Great Pacific Garbage Patch- Good Morning America 2010 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLrVCI4N67M&feature=player_embedded http://marinedebris.noaa.gov/info/patch.html#6
  • 41. Eddy A circular movement of water formed along the edge of a permanent current In an average year, 10-15 rings are formed 150-300 km in diameter Speed 1 m/sec Warm core ring 1. Rotates clockwise 2. Found on the landward side of the current Cold core ring (cyclonic eddy) 1. Rotates counterclockwise 2. Forms on the ocean side of the current
  • 43.
  • 44. Upwelling and downwelling Vertical movement of water () – Upwelling = movement of deep water to surface • Hoists cold, nutrient-rich water to surface • Produces high productivities and abundant marine life – Downwelling = movement of surface water down • Moves warm, nutrient-depleted surface water down • Not associated with high productivities or abundant marine life
  • 45. upwelling downwelling
  • 47. Satellite Observations • TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason 1, and other satellites have observed patterns of change over the past few years • Animation of seasonal and climatically- influence shifts available at http://seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov/OCEAN_PLANET/MOVIES /Topex_Dynamic_Ocean_Topography.mpg
  • 48. El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) • El Niño = warm surface current in equatorial eastern Pacific that occurs periodically around Christmastime • Southern Oscillation = change in atmospheric pressure over Pacific Ocean accompanying El Niño • ENSO describes a combined oceanic- atmospheric disturbance
  • 49. El Niño • Oceanic and atmospheric phenomenon in the Pacific Ocean • Occurs during December • 2 to 7 year cycle Sea Surface Temperature Atmospheric Winds Upwelling
  • 50. Normal conditions in the Pacific Ocean
  • 51. El Niño conditions (ENSO warm phase)
  • 52. La Niña conditions (ENSO cool phase; opposite of El Niño)
  • 53. Non El Niño El Niño 1997
  • 54. Non El Niño upwelling El Niño thermocline
  • 55. El Niño events over the last 55 years El Niño warmings (red) and La Niña coolings (blue) since 1950. Source: NOAA Climate Diagnostics Center
  • 56. World Wide Effects of El Niño • Weather patterns • Marine Life • Economic resources El Nino Animation http://esminfo.prenhall.com/science/geoanimations/ani mations/26_NinoNina.html
  • 57. Effects of severe El Niños
  • 58. Surface and Deep-Sea Current Interactions Unifying concept: ―Global Ocean Conveyor Belt‖ http://seis.natsci.csulb.edu/rbehl/ConvBelt.htm
  • 59. Heat Transport by Currents • Surface currents play significant roles in transport heat energy from equatorial waters towards the poles • May serve as ―heat sources‖ to cooler overlying air, ―heat sinks‖ from warmer • Evaporation and condensation participate in latent heat exchanges
  • 60. Matter Transport and Surface Currents • Currents also involved with gas exchanges, especially O2 and CO2 • Nutrient exchanges important within surface waters (including outflow from continents) and deeper waters (upwelling and downwelling) • Pollution dispersal • Impact on fisheries and other resources
  • 61. Global ocean circulation that is driven by differences in the density of the sea water which is controlled by temperature and salinity.
  • 62. White sections represent warm surface currents. Purple sections represent deep cold currents
  • 63.
  • 64. What effect does global warming play in thermohaline circulation? http://www.youtube.com/v/MZbsMlr9WRI?version=3
  • 65. 1 2 3 4 CO2 fossil fuel Atmospheric and Subtropical High latitude combustion ocean temp evaporation precipitation & runoff North Atlantic regional cooling Deep water formation Nordic seas & thermohaline salinity & deep Potential feedback circulation convection of increased tropical salinity 6 5 Global climate interconnections
  • 66. Inquiry 1. What is a convection cell? 2. Which direction do currents get deflected in the Southern Hemisphere? 3. What depth should the water be for an Ekman spiral to occur? 4. How are surface currents created? 5. What is a gyre? 6. How can an El Nino impact upwelling? 7. Coriolis Effect is strongest near the _____?