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Formation and pathways of the intermediate water in the Parallel Ocean Circulation Model's Southern Ocean

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Formation and pathways of the intermediate water in the Parallel Ocean Circulation Model's Southern Ocean
Names Schouten, Mathijs W. (creator)
Matano, Ricardo P. (creator)
Date Issued 2006 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract The formation mechanisms and pathways of intermediate water in the Southern Ocean
are analyzed from output of a high-resolution ocean general circulation model. Deep
winter mixed layer formation in the Southern Ocean is diagnosed from the model results
and is found to be mostly consistent with observations. Diapycnal water mass
transformations by air-sea fluxes and internal mixing are quantified and split into mean
and eddy components. The diapycnal formation of the water masses that constitute the
Antarctic intermediate water layer in the southeast Pacific is found to occur mainly in the
western Pacific Ocean in this model. In winter, convection up to 900 m is found to set
the potential vorticity characteristics of this layer. Eddy fluxes of heat and buoyancy play
an important role in the formation of the intermediate waters by transferring water
from the southern parts of the subtropical gyres into the Antarctic Circumpolar Current
(ACC) and vice versa. The effects of eddy fluxes are found to vary significantly along the
path of the ACC. They are strongly concentrated in the regions near the Agulhas Return
Current in the Indian Ocean and the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence in the Atlantic.
Genre Article
Identifier Matano, R. P., and Schouten, M. W. (2006), Formation and pathways of intermediate water in the Parallel Ocean Circulation Model’s Southern Ocean, J. Geophys. Res., 111, C06015.

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