4.7 Review

The Antarctic Slope Current in a Changing Climate

期刊

REVIEWS OF GEOPHYSICS
卷 56, 期 4, 页码 741-770

出版社

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018RG000624

关键词

Antarctic Slope Current; fronts; transport; eddies; climate; Antarctic ice sheet

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [OPP-1246460, OPP-1644172, OCE-1538702, PLR-1543388, OCE-1751386]
  2. Australian Research Council DECRA Fellowship [DE150100223]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [741120]
  4. NERC [NE/J005703/1, NE/H01439X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [741120] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Antarctic Slope Current (ASC) is a coherent circulation feature that rings the Antarctic continental shelf and regulates the flow of water toward the Antarctic coastline. The structure and variability of the ASC influences key processes near the Antarctic coastline that have global implications, such as the melting of Antarctic ice shelves and water mass formation that determines the strength of the global overturning circulation. Recent theoretical, modeling, and observational advances have revealed new dynamical properties of the ASC, making it timely to review. Earlier reviews of the ASC focused largely on local classifications of water properties of the ASC's primary front. Here we instead provide a classification of the current's frontal structure based on the dynamical mechanisms that govern both the along-slope and cross-slope circulation; these two modes of circulation are strongly coupled, similar to the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Highly variable motions, such as dense overflows, tides, and eddies are shown to be critical components of cross-slope and cross-shelf exchange, but understanding of how the distribution and intensity of these processes will evolve in a changing climate remains poor due to observational and modeling limitations. Results linking the ASC to larger modes of climate variability, such as El Nino, show that the ASC is an integral part of global climate. An improved dynamical understanding of the ASC is still needed to accurately model and predict future Antarctic sea ice extent, the stability of the Antarctic ice sheets, and the Southern Ocean's contribution to the global carbon cycle. Plain Language Summary The continent of Antarctica is surrounded by the Southern Ocean, which transports heat poleward toward the Antarctic margins while also influencing atmospheric wind and sea ice patterns. At the very southern boundary of the Southern Ocean, a narrow westward flowing circulation feature, known as the Antarctic Slope Current (ASC), forms where the Antarctic continental slope meets the continental shelf. Here relatively warm waters-a few degrees above the freezing temperature-rise up toward the continental shelf. Despite this circumpolar delivery of heat toward Antarctica, the ability of this warm water to cross the ASC and to access the continental shelf varies greatly due to this current's dynamical properties. In some regions, the ASC forms a strong barrier to heat transport, and shelf waters remain cold and fresh. Elsewhere, the ASC provides a much weaker barrier, and warm water floods the shelf including under floating ice shelves, which can lead to enhanced ice shelf melt rates and ultimately to the destabilization of Antarctica's ice sheets. This review provides a summary of recent observational, modeling, and theoretical efforts to describe the structure and variability of the ASC, and offers insight into how future changes in the ASC may impact global climate.

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