measurements in the ocean peter challenor university of exeter and national oceanography centre

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Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

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Page 1: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Measurements in the Ocean

Peter ChallenorUniversity of Exeter

and National Oceanography Centre

Page 2: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre
Page 3: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

What is Measured

• Temperature and Salinity – Density• Bottom Pressure• Velocity• Tracer Chemistry

Page 4: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Geostrophy

Combining and integrating

So we take density changes relative to a reference level, z0, and we can calculate the velocity between any two columns of density measurements

Page 5: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Temperature and Salinity from Research Ships

Page 6: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

The Reversing Thermometer

Main Instrument for temperature pre-1970Sd 0.01K (Quadfasel et al 1990)

Page 7: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

CTD – conductivity, temperature and depth

Page 8: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Salinty

• Salinity is measured by the conductivity• This measurement needs to be calibrated• This is done on board ship from water samples

with a salinometer

Page 9: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Repeat Hydrography

Page 10: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

EXPENDABLE PROBES

Page 11: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

The Expendable BathyThermograph (XBT)

Only measures temperature. Depth comes from drop rate.Widely used by navies and some commercial ships.Recent corrections to drop rate

Page 12: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Routine XBT Coverage

Page 13: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Floats and Seals

Page 14: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Floats

Page 15: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

ARGO floats

Page 16: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre
Page 17: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre
Page 18: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

The current ARGO network

Page 19: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Data from Marine Mammals

Page 20: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Experimental full depth ARGO floats

Page 21: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Gliders

Page 22: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Autosub

Page 23: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

VELOCITY MEASUREMENTS

Page 24: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Current Meters

Page 25: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

MOORINGS

Page 26: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre
Page 27: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

MOVE Array

Page 28: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

RAPID @ 26.5˚N (2004-2014)

Cunningham, S. A., et al. (2007), Temporal variability of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation at 26.5°N, Science, 317, 935-938.Kanzow, T., et al. (2007), Observed flow compensation associated with the MOC at 26.5°N in the Atlantic, Science, 317, 938-941.

Measuring the strength and vertical structure of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and associated heat transport

Page 29: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

The array

Page 30: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

The array

Page 31: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

The array

Page 32: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

RAPID MOC time series: since 2004

Page 33: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Tracer Chemistry

• The ocean dissolves gases from the atmosphere

• Anthropogenic gases – Tritium, CFC, … – have known atmospheric concentrations with time.

• Knowing the dissolution rate we can estimate the time since any sample of water was at the surface

Page 34: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Motivation: How much anthropogenic carbon does the ocean take up?

• Where does the ocean take up carbon?• How might the uptake of carbon respond to

further changes in the climate system?

Sabine et al, Science, 2004

Page 35: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

World Ocean Database 2013

• Collects all oceanographic data • http://www.nodc.noaa.gov/OC5/WOD/

pr_wod.html

Page 36: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Pre-1900

Page 37: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1900-1909

Page 38: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1910-1919

Page 39: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1920-1929

Page 40: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1930-1939

Page 41: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1940-1949

Page 42: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1950-1959

Page 43: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1960-1969

Page 44: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1970-1979

Page 45: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1980-1989

Page 46: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

1990-1999

Page 47: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

2000-2009

Page 48: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

2010-Present

Page 49: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Post 1980 CTD 3500m+

Page 50: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

World Ocean Atlas 2009

• ‘Objectively Analysed’ mean field + s.d. at 1°and 5° resolution at fixed depth levels

• http://www.nodc.noaa.gov/OC5/WOA09/pr_woa09.html

Page 51: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Inverse Solutions

Ganachaud & Wunsch (2000)

Page 52: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Reanalyses

• Combine data with ocean models via data assimilation– ECCO– SODA– ECMWF

Page 53: Measurements in the Ocean Peter Challenor University of Exeter and National Oceanography Centre

Some Statistical Issues

• Modelling T&S simultaneously (Sahu and Challenor 2008)

• 3-d analysis• Analysis along density levels rather than

pressure or depth levels• Spatio-temporal modelling with data at

varying locations