Enhanced upwelling of Antarctic Bottom Water by topographic interaction
of water mass interfaces
Abstract
The lower cell of the meridional overturning circulation (MOC) is
sourced by dense Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW), which forms and sinks
around Antarctica and subsequently fills the abyssal ocean. For the MOC
to ‘overturn’, these dense waters must upwell through mixing with
lighter waters above. Here, we investigate the processes underpinning
such mixing, and the resulting water mass transformation, using an
observationally forced, high-resolution numerical model of the Drake
Passage in the Southern Ocean. In the Drake Passage, the mixing of dense
AABW formed in the Weddell Sea with lighter deep waters transported from
the Pacific Ocean by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current is catalysed by
energetic flows impinging on rough topography. We find that multiple
topographic interaction processes act to facilitate mixing of the two
water masses, ultimately resulting in upwelling of waters with neutral
density greater 28.19 kg m-3, and downwelling of the lighter waters
above. In particular, we identify the role of sharp density interfaces
between AABW and overlying waters, and find that the dynamics of the
interfaces’ interaction with topography can enhance mixing. Such sharp
interfaces between water masses have been observed in several parts of
the global ocean, but are unresolved and unrepresented in ocean and
climate models. We suggest that they are likely to play an important
role in abyssal dynamics and mixing, and therefore require further
exploration.