Can the Ocean's Heat Engine Control Horizontal Circulation? Insights From the Caspian Sea

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Abstract

We investigate the role of the ocean's heat engine in setting horizontal circulation using a numerical model of the Caspian Sea. The Caspian Sea can be seen as a virtual laboratory—a compromise between realistic global models that are hampered by long equilibration times and idealized basin geometry models, which are not constrained by observations. We find that increases in vertical mixing drive stronger thermally direct overturning and consequent conversion of available potential to kinetic energy. Numerical solutions with water mass structures closest to observations overturn 0.02–0.04 × 106 m3/s (sverdrup) representing the first estimate of Caspian Sea overturning. Our results also suggest that the overturning is thermally forced increasing in intensity with increasing vertical diffusivity. Finally, stronger thermally direct overturning is associated with a stronger horizontal circulation in the Caspian Sea. This suggests that the ocean's heat engine can strongly impact broader horizontal circulations in the ocean.

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Bruneau, N., Zika, J., & Toumi, R. (2017). Can the Ocean’s Heat Engine Control Horizontal Circulation? Insights From the Caspian Sea. Geophysical Research Letters, 44(19), 9893–9900. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GL075182

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