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Heat Transfer in Earth’s Oceans WOW!, 3 meters of ocean water can hold as much energy as all other Earth Systems combined! Tropical air rising • • • • Warming air = lower density+increasing volume Rising air = lower pressure, lower temperature Condensation = warming Result: tremendous rainfall along the equator Surface Ocean – Temp. is variable -2 to 30°C 200 m Average Temp. of the world ocean is 3.8°C Deep ocean – Temp. is stable -1 to 4°C Sinking air Hadley Cell 0° Latitude 30° latitude Hot, humid Hot, dry (desert belt) Surface ocean circulation • Solar radiation • Large heat capacity • Heat variations lead to changes in pressures • Air circulation (wind) – Gyres Tropical Gyre • Driven by wind – Trade winds – Westerly movement – Counter clockwise (CCW) direction (northern hemisphere) Subtropical Gyre • Very active evaporation – A product of warm/dry air moving over the oceans and land masses • Results in a warm and salty Gulf Stream • The gyre moves in a clockwise (CW) direction in this region. Sub Polar Gyre • Tremendous transfer of heat from the ocean to the atmosphere. – This warms the rising air that travels northeast and through northern Europe. – The Erbinger Current (Norwegian/Greenland Sea) General surface current movements • Winds mix and transport warm waters through the Earth’s oceans – Depth of 100 m – Average depth of 4000 m • Warm water is circulated from the tropics towards the poles • Coriolis force Movement beneath the surface • Coriolis force – Pushes the underlying water – Through a depth of 100 m – Friction drives the downward spiralling water further to the right (Nh) or left (Sh) Subpolar sink • Water becomes cold and salty (increase in density) to the north of Greenland. • This cold dense water sinks creating vertical movement – Supplies the deep ocean with circulating water Northern sub polar gyre Southern Hemisphere • This vertical movement also occurs in the southern hemisphere – Weddell Sea – Both movements (north and south) occur in the Atlantic ocean Polar water/ice • Ice is fresh water • Circum-Antarctic Current: Flows around Antarctica – Circulates from west to east – 4000 cubic meters of water – Insulates Antarctica (keeps it cold) • This circulation pattern has a huge effect on global climate. Deep Water Circulation • Deep water goes from the North Atlantic to the North Pacific. • Surface water flows opposite of the deep water pattern • The deep cycle is about 800 to 1000 years. • Surface water cycles occur on the order of decades. Water and The Global Water Cycle • Largest bulk chemical transfer on Earth • Important to heat transfer from the Equator (evaporation) • Patterns control regional distribution rainfall in terrestrial environments • Movement of water is a function of evaporation and precipitation of two pumps. – Biologic – Physical The Biological Pump • Operates on feedback • Nutrients + H20 +CO2 → organic matter + O2 Evapotranspiration O2 + H2O Nutrients, soil Photosynthesis, CO2 Biologic Pump, negative feedback • When there is ample water the inner cell is enlarged and promotes evapotranspiration • When water is short the inner cell is closed allowing for the absence of evapotranspiration Water budget 27,500,000 40,000 Rivers, 40,000 Ice Atmosphere = 13,000 385,000 425,000 Ground water 8,200,000 Units - 1000 Km3 : 1m Ocean (1,350,000) = 97% of the total water water = metric tons, 50 * 1000 Km3 = 1018 Longer residence time for the land system • Stock / flux – Residence time of water in the atmosphere – 13,000 (atmosphere) / 425,000 (evaporation) = 0.3 years × 52 weeks • Residence time in the oceans – 1,350,000,000/425,000 = 3176 years Calculate the residence time of land. • Add the stocks and divide by the flux • 357,040,000/425,000 = 840 years • There are more stocks than listed here so the value of 840 years will be an underestimate. Calculating the average evaporation and precipitation • Ocean: – 100 cm/yr, evaporation – 70 cm/yr, precipitation • Tropics – 4mm/day (precipitation is skewed to the tropics because this zone account for 50% of the runoff on Earth • Poles – X≤1mm/day, Desert belt 0% rain leads to little to no runoff. The Jungle effect (Tropics) The Amazon and Oronoco flow systems are responsible for 20% of Earth’s runoff Trade winds Amazon River The Amazon Basin Ocean Bio-enhanced cloud formation, This is a water trap set up by biologic activity Physical Pump • Summer – Rainy season – Drives major rivers – Monsoons in India • Winter – The ocean surface circulation follows wind patterns moving away from land