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Atmosphere/Ocean circulation and Hurricane workshop Chautauqua UWA-6, Dr. E.J. Zita 9-11 July 2007 Fire, Air, and Water: Effects of the Sun, Atmosphere, and Oceans in Climate Change and Global Warming What causes atmospheric circulation? Uneven insolation … → Warmer tropics … → Hot (equatorial) air rises … → Air flows to lower pressure → Convection cells drive weather Low pressure → rising air cools → condensation → precipitation Q: Why do north-south convection flows turn east or west? Coriolis force turns winds to the right, in the Northern hemisphere Coriolis force animations • http://www.baesi.org/TRG/coriolis/CORIOLIS.MOV (Cor3) • http://www.wiley.com/college/strahler/0471480533/animat ions/ch07_animations/animation2.html (Cor2) • http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/conten t/visualizations/es1904/es1904page01.cfm?chapter_no=vis ualization (Cor1) Thanks to Gerardo Chin-Leo for researching these animations. Low pressure storms: CCW in N. hem Heat transport and exchange Your HYPOTHESES: What variables do each of these depend on? 1. Heat required to raise temperature of water? 2. Heat required to evaporate water? 3. Heat stored in water vapor? 4. Energy of hurricanes? Q: How much heat is required to raise the temperature of water? To raise the temperature of a mass m(kg) of water by DT (K) requires Heat Q (joules) = m c DT, where c = specific heat of water = 4186 J/kg.K Ex: need Q1=4186 J to heat 1 kg of water by 1K Q: How much heat is required to evaporate water? Evaporating a mass m(kg) of water requires Heat Q (joules) = m L, where L = the latent heat of vaporization of water = 22.6 x 105 J/kg Ex: Need Qvap= 22.6 x 105 J/kg to evaporate 1 kg of water! A million times more energy! Q: How much heat is stored in water vapor? This is the same as the heat it took to evaporate the water. Phase transitions absorb/release a LOT of heat – with NO temperature change in the water! Ex: why does it get warmer when it snows? Q: How much energy is in a hurricane? Warm sea + air → evaporation → stored latent heat → http://www.futurasciences.com/comprendre/ d/images/573/cyclone_elena.jpg Low pressure + Coriolis force + kinetic energy → tropical storms How to quantify hurricane energy? Hurricane workshop Your HYPOTHESES: What variables does hurricane destructiveness depend on? • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________ Power Dissipation Index PDI ~ Kinetic energy * speed (let speed = v) Kinetic energy = ½ mv2 PDI ~ speed to what power? □ PDI = a v (where a is some constant) Hurricane speed and Temp “Theoretically, the peak wind speed of tropical cyclones should increase by about 5% for every 1ºC in tropical ocean temperature.” (Emanuel, p.687-688) Tropical sea surface temperature has increased about 0.5ºC in the last 30 years How much should peak winds have increased? Call this x% Wind speed and PDI If peak winds have increased by x%, then how much should hurricane destructiveness (PDI) increase? Tropical storm data Tropical storm data Qualitative: Does there appear to be a correlation between sea surface temperature (SST) and power dissipation index (PDI)? Quantitative? How much has the PDI risen in the past 30 years? Does this fit our predictions? Testing & improving the model What other factors could contribute to the huge increase in PDI? (Emanuel, p.688) Significance and predictions DISCUSS: • Correlations? • Causal relations? • Strength of relations? • Current trends? • Relation to global warming? • Other? Shall we take a break… Then return to ocean circulation… Dynamics of Marine Systems: Ocean circulation and climate change • • • • Overview Surface currents (geostrophic currents) Deep currents (thermohaline circulation) ENSO Adapted from lectures by Dr. Gerardo Chin-Leo, TESC Salinity and temperature gradients drive flows and concentrate organisms. Boundaries between strata are important because they are areas where organisms accumulate. Boundaries also limit the exchange of nutrients such as gases and other dissolved materials. Oceanography and Climate Change • Physical – Storage and redistribution of heat – Albedo (ocean and ice reflectivity) • Chemical – Source and sink of greenhouse gases • Biological – Source and sink of greenhouse gases – Source of cloud condensation nuclei Ocean Currents • Surface wind-driven circulation. The motion and pattern of surface currents are a result of the presence of continents and the balance between the Wind Stress and the Coriolis effect. Geostrophic (geo=earth, strophio=turn) currents. – Short term storage (days-years) and transfer of heat to higher latitudes • Thermohaline circulation. These deep currents result from the sinking of dense water in the North Atlantic and Antarctic Oceans, forcing horizontal circulation of water in the deep-sea – Long term storage (~1000 y) storage and transfer of heat, nutrients and CO2 Surface currents How are surface currents measured? • Directly – Stationary current meters – Drifters • Indirectly from the determination of – wind patterns and knowledge of how water responds to wind stress – the density structure in the oceans (currents flow from low to high density areas) Geostrophic current A horizontal current of water that is the result of the balance between flow down a slope due to gravity and the Coriolis effect. Ekman transport Ekman transport → convergence Deep ocean conveyor belt How are deep sea currents measured? • Inferred from the density structure of the oceans • Radiotracers – H3 (tritium) from Atomic Bomb testing can be used as a tracer for deep water movements – C14. The ratio of C14:C12 in the surface ocean reflects the concentration in the atmosphere. Deep ocean water is removed from atmospheric exchange and the ratio changes as the C14 decays Production of C14 by cosmic rays CALCULATIONS The rate of radionuclide decay is directly proportional to the number of radionuclides in a given sample and can be expressed using the equation N = No e-kt which can be rewritten as: ln (N / No) = - k t , Where: ln = natural logarithm function N = radioactivity at present. 14C radioactivity of the sample being analyzed. No = radioactivity at time of formation. Typically the 14C radioactivity of a standard material. k = decay constant. This is unique for each radionuclide and equals 0.693 / , where is the half-life of the isotope. 0.693 is the ln(2). The decay constant is negative because the rate decreases over time. EXERCISE: In a deep-sea sediment core, at 20 cm depth foraminifera (CaCO3 containing organisms) have a 14C radioactivity of 5.5 cpms g-1. At 40 cm depth the foraminifera have a 14C radioactivity of 1.64 cpms g-1. Determine the sedimentation rate in cms per 1000 yrs. At 20 cm the age of the foram is: ln (5.5 / 13.6) = - (0.693 / 5730) t ln (0.40) = - (1.22 X 10-4) t -0.9163 / - 1.22 X 10-4 = t = 7,421 yrs At 40 cm the age of the foram is: ln (1.64/ 13.6) = - (0.693 / 5730) t ln (0.12) = - (1.22 X 10-4) t -2.1154 / - 1.22 X 10-4 = t = 17,339 yrs The difference in age of the 2 layers is 17,339 - 7,421 = 9,918 years Thus it took 9,918 years to deposit 20 cm of sediment The rate is 20 cm / 9,918 year = 2.02 cm per 1000 years How are mean global temperatures estimated? El Niño – Southern Oscillation El Niño / Southern Oscillation Interannual climate disturbance characterized by warming of the equatorial Pacific. This is caused by oscillations in the atmospheric pressure systems in the Southern Hemisphere which results in: -Weakening of southwest trades wind leading to weak upwelling off the coast of Peru. This causes the presence of warm water, reversal of local climate, low primary production, low production of anchovies and seabirds (and drier winters in the Pacific Northwest). -Warming of the Equatorial Pacific, disruption of global weather patterns ENSO demonstrates the tight coupling between the ocean and the atmosphere. This close relationship makes it difficult to determine what triggers an ENSO event. Time scale: 2-7 years Southern Oscillation (pressure) El Niño / Southern Oscillation Changes atmospheric CO2 Changes wind patterns and air temperatures Changes clouds, water vapor content, and hurricanes Predicted to increase (IPCC, 2007) El Niño and Hurricanes El Niño ↔ warmer Pacific waters → more Pacific storms El Niño ↔ cooler Atlantic waters → fewer Atlantic tropical cyclones NOAA – AP – July 2007