| Literature DB >> 32024877 |
Angelo Rubino1, Miroslav Gačić2, Manuel Bensi2, Vedrana Kovačević2, Vlado Malačič3, Milena Menna2, Maria Eletta Negretti4, Joël Sommeria4, Davide Zanchettin5, Ricardo V Barreto5, Laura Ursella2, Vanessa Cardin2, Giuseppe Civitarese2, Mirko Orlić6, Boris Petelin3, Giuseppe Siena2.
Abstract
Under the emerging features of interannual-to-decadal ocean variability, the periodical reversals of the North Ionian Gyre (NIG), driven mostly by the mechanism named Adriatic-Ionian Bimodal Oscillating System (BiOS), are known as impacting on marine physics and biogeochemistry and potentially influencing short-term regional climate predictability in the Eastern Mediterranean. Whilst it has been suggested that local wind forcing cannot explain such variability, aspects of the alternative hypothesis indicating that NIG reversals mainly arises from an internal ocean feedback mechanism alone remain largely debated. Here we demonstrate, using the results of physical experiments, performed in the world's largest rotating tank and numerical simulations, that the main observed feature of BiOS, i.e., the switch of polarity of the near-surface circulation in the NIG, can be induced by a mere injection of dense water on a sloping bottom. Hence, BiOS is a truly oceanic mode of variability and abrupt polarity changes in circulation can arise solely from extreme dense water formation events.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32024877 PMCID: PMC7002567 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-57862-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic representation of the geostrophic circulation in the North Ionian Gyre region. (a) anticyclonic phase. (b) cyclonic phase. The background maps are annual averages of Absolute Dynamic Topography (ADT) in 1996 and 2003, respectively. For the water mass acronyms see text. Adapted from Menna et al.[35].
Figure 2Laboratory experimental setup. (a) photo of the LEGI tank prepared for the BiOS-CRoPEx experiment. (b) Schematic vertical cross section of the tank. The turquoise layer represents the dense water injected in the two-layer system (densities ρtop and ρbottom) through the injectors S1 (density ρ1 and discharge Q1) and S2 (density ρ2 and discharge Q2, see methods for full description of symbols). (c) Timeline of the injection during the experiment. The solid lines represent the injected water densities and the duration of injections, with discharge rate reported above each segment of the experiment.
Figure 3Velocity field observed during the BiOS-CRoPEx experiment. (a) Horizontal distributions of the flow (arrows) and velocity magnitudes (shading) in the uppermost level at experimental day 42, before the dense water injection. (b) Same as (a) but at experimental day 83, before the end of the dense water injection. (c) Same as (a), but simulated by the numerical frontal model. (d) Same as (b) but simulated by the numerical frontal model. S1 and S2 are the sources of dense water.
Figure 4Normalized vorticity (vorticity divided by the Coriolis parameter (10−4 s−1, 10−1 s−1, 10−1 s−1 for panels a, b, and c, respectively). (a) Surface geostrophic vorticity observed in the Northern Ionian area during the year 2012. (b) Spatially averaged vorticity field in the upper layer within the central portion of the laboratory tank for two different experiments: Solid lines represent the normalized vorticity of EXP27 at different depths (in cm) from the free surface, dotted colored lines represent the same normalized vorticities for EXP25, similar to EXP27, but with an injection of dense water having density ρ = 1019.5 kg/m3 at day 57 and with a larger flow rate (2l/s). (c) Near-surface spatially averaged vorticity field within the central portion of the tank as simulated by the numerical frontal model. The vertical lines indicate the onset and the end of the dense-water injection. Please note the different temporal scales in the abscissae between oceanic conditions on one hand and, physical and numerical models on the other. Grey line in c represents the vorticity change computed from the theoretical expression (see Methods).