Assessing heat and freshwater changes in the Southern Ocean using satellite-derived steric height

Type Article
Acceptance Date 2023-12-22 IN PRESS
Language English
Author(s) Cocks JenniferORCID1, 2, Silvano AlessandroORCID3, Marzocchi AliceORCID1, Dragomir Oana3, Schifano Noemie4, Hogg Anna E.2, Naveira Garabato Alberto C.3
Affiliation(s) 1 : National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, SO14 3ZH, United Kingdom
2 : Institute for Climate and Atmospheric Science, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom
3 : School of Ocean and Earth Science, University of Southampton, SO14 3ZH, United Kingdom
4 : Univ. Brest, CNRS, IRD, Ifremer, Laboratoire d’Océanographie Physique et Spatiale, IUEM, Brest, France
Source EGUsphere (Copernicus GmbH) In Press
DOI 10.5194/egusphere-2023-3050
Note status: this preprint is open for discussion.
Abstract

The Southern Ocean plays a central role in regulating the global overturing circulation, ventilating the deep ocean, and driving sea level rise by delivering heat to Antarctic ice shelves. Understanding heat and freshwater content in this region is key to monitoring these global processes and identifying multiyear changes; however, in-situ observations are limited, and often do not offer the spatial or temporal consistency needed to study long-term variability. Perturbations in steric height can reveal changes in oceanic heat and freshwater content inasmuch as they impact the density of the water column. Here, we show for the first time that the monthly steric height anomaly of the Southern Ocean south of 50° S can be assessed using altimetry and GRACE gravimetry data from 2002 to 2018. Steric height anomalies are validated against in-situ Argo float and CTD data from tagged elephant seals. We find good agreement in the ice-free ocean and parts of the seasonal ice zone, but that the uncertainty of steric height increases on the Antarctic continental shelf and within the permanent ice zone due to leakage error and anti-aliasing in GRACE. The open-ocean steric height anomalies exhibit spatio-temporally coherent patterns that: (i) capture the expected seasonal cycle of low (high) steric height in winter (summer); and (ii) reflect interannual anomalies in surface heat and freshwater content and wind forcing associated with positive and negative phases of the two major modes of Southern Hemisphere climate variability (the El Niño – Southern Oscillation and Southern Annular Mode).

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