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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-03-15
    Description: [1]  The magnitude of geothermal heating in the East/Japan Sea is about 100 mW/m 2 , twice that of a typical abyssal plains. In addition, bottom stratification in the East/Japan Sea is much weaker than that typical of the open ocean. Thus geothermal heating could have more prominent effects in the East/Japan Sea than in the open ocean, and we tested this hypothesis via numerical modeling. With less than 100 mW/m 2 bottom heat flux we were able to reproduce bottom mixed layers that are thicker than ~1000 m as observed. Previously no numerical model has been successful in reproducing such bottom mixed layers. Geothermal heating intensifies the bottom flows but the simulated flows are not as strong as the observed ones. Over the northern part of the East/Japan Sea, reduction in deep stratification strengthens deep water mass formation, intensifying cyclonic circulations located over this area, so the effects of the heating extend to the surface. As the cyclonic circulation becomes stronger the water at the center of the gyre is trapped and more exposed to cold air, so it becomes cooler, and colder deep water is produced. When the geothermal heating is strong enough the surface cooling effect dominates the bottom heating and the deep layer becomes cooler showing that the non-linear effects of geothermal heating are far reaching. Thus to account for the observed dynamics the full three-dimensional circulation at the basin scale is needed.
    Print ISSN: 0148-0227
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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