Transport structure of the South Atlantic Ocean derived from a
high-resolution numerical model and observations
Abstract
The South Atlantic Ocean plays an important role in the Atlantic
meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), connecting it to the Indian
and Pacific Oceans as part of the global overturning circulation system;
yet the detailed time mean circulation structure in this region and the
large-scale spatial pattern of the AMOC variability remain unclear.
Using model outputs from a 60-year, eddying global ocean-sea ice
simulation validated against observations at a zonal section at 34°S, a
meridional section at 65°W in the Drake Passage, and a meridional
section southwest of Africa, we show that the upper limb of the AMOC
originates primarily from the Agulhas leakage and that, while the cold
Pacific water from the Drake Passage does not contribute significantly
to the AMOC, it does play a role in setting the temperature and salinity
properties of the water masses in the subtropical South Atlantic. We
also find that the North Atlantic deep water (NADW) in the lower limb of
the AMOC flows southward as a deep western boundary current all the way
to 45°S and then turns eastward to flow across the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
near 42°S, and that the recirculation around the Vitoria-Trindade
seamount chain brings some NADW into the Brazil Basin interior. Finally,
we find that the modeled AMOC variability is coherent on interannual to
decadal timescales from 35°S to about 35°N, where diapycnal water mass
transformations between the upper and lower limbs of the AMOC are
expected to be small.