4.7 Article

Squeeze Dispersion and the Effective Diapycnal Diffusivity of Oceanic Tracers

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 46, Issue 10, Pages 5378-5386

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2019GL082458

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NOAA Climate and Global Change Postdoctoral Fellowship Program - National Science Foundation [OCE-1029268, OCE-1029483, OCE-1657795]

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We describe a process called squeeze dispersion in which the squeezing of oceanic tracer gradients by waves, eddies, and bathymetric flow modulates diapycnal diffusion by centimeter to meter-scale turbulence. Due to squeeze dispersion, the effective diapycnal diffusivity of oceanic tracers is different and typically greater than the average local diffusivity, especially when local diffusivity correlates with squeezing. We develop a theory to quantify the effects of squeeze dispersion on diapycnal oceanic transport, finding formulas that connect density-averaged tracer flux, locally measured diffusivity, large-scale oceanic strain, the thickness-weighted average buoyancy gradient, and the effective diffusivity of oceanic tracers. We use this effective diffusivity to interpret observations of abyssal flow through the Samoan Passage reported by Alford et al. (2013, https://doi.org/10.1002/grl.50684) and find that squeezing modulates diapycnal tracer dispersion by factors between 0.5 and 3. Plain Language Summary Turbulent vertical ocean mixing forms a key part of the Earth's climate system by drawing atmospheric carbon and heat into the massive reservoir that is the deep ocean. Quantifying vertical ocean mixing is difficult: vertical mixing is associated with turbulence at the tiny scales of centimeters to meters but affects the entire ocean on the long time scales of decades and centuries. We demonstrate that vertical ocean mixing depends not only on small-scale turbulence, but on the combination of small-scale turbulence and larger-scale motions, such as currents, eddies, and waves similar to the jet streams and hurricanes of the atmosphere. In particular, when a patch of ocean is mixed by small-scale turbulence while being squeezed in the vertical at the same time by currents and eddies, the patch ultimately mixes more quickly than the turbulence would cause alone. This means that estimating the total rate of oceanic vertical mixing requires knowledge both of the magnitude of ocean squeezing as well as the intensity of small-scale ocean turbulence.

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