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Oceanic ventilation and biogeochemical cycling: Understanding the physical mechanisms that produce realistic distributions of tracers and productivity
- Source :
- Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 18
- Publication Year :
- 2004
- Publisher :
- American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2004.
-
Abstract
- [1] Differing models of the ocean circulation support different rates of ventilation, which in turn produce different distributions of radiocarbon, oxygen, and export production. We examine these fields within a suite of general circulation models run to examine the sensitivity of the circulation to the parameterization of subgridscale mixing and surface forcing. We find that different models can explain relatively high fractions of the spatial variance in some fields such as radiocarbon, and that newer estimates of the rate of biological cycling are in better agreement with the models than previously published estimates. We consider how different models achieve such agreement and show that they can accomplish this in different ways. For example, models with high vertical diffusion move young surface waters into the Southern Ocean, while models with high winds move more young North Atlantic water into this region. The dependence on parameter values is not simple. Changes in the vertical diffusion coefficient, for example, can produce major changes in advective fluxes. In the coarse-resolution models studied here, lateral diffusion plays a major role in the tracer budget of the deep ocean, a somewhat worrisome fact as it is poorly constrained both observationally and theoretically. INDEX TERMS: 4275 Oceanography: General: Remote sensing and electromagnetic processes (0689); 4532 Oceanography: Physical: General circulation; 4568 Oceanography: Physical: Turbulence, diffusion, and mixing processes; 4845 Oceanography: Biological and Chemical: Nutrients and nutrient cycling; KEYWORDS: biogeochemical cycles, particle export, vertical exchange
- Subjects :
- Atmospheric Science
Global and Planetary Change
Biogeochemical cycle
Advection
Ocean current
Biogeochemistry
Forcing (mathematics)
Deep sea
Physics::Geophysics
Climatology
Environmental Chemistry
Environmental science
Diffusion (business)
Surface water
Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
General Environmental Science
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 08866236
- Volume :
- 18
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........5a395b23770e5b8fa0336a4ba08bc746
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2003gb002097