1. Introduction
The meridional overturning circulation and stratification of the global ocean are shaped critically by processes in the Southern Ocean [see Marshall and Speer (2012) and Rintoul and Naveira Garabato (2013) for recent reviews]. The zonally unblocked nature of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) system confers the region with a set of special dynamics that ultimately results in the focusing therein of large vertical exchanges between layers spanning the global ocean pycnocline. The nature of these exchanges has been the subject of an extensive body of theoretical and modeling work. Although the existence of an intricate coupling between zonal flow and meridional overturning in the ACC is unanimously highlighted by that literature, there is no consensus to date on the specific dynamical controls of the circulation.
Efforts to unravel the dynamics that regulate the extension of meridional overturning across the Southern Ocean and its associated hydrographic structure have regularly focused on understanding how the region is forced by wind and air–sea exchanges of buoyancy. Appealing to residual-mean theory, the circulation ensuing from these forcings is conceptually expressed as an interplay between an Eulerian-mean, wind-driven Ekman overturning cell that acts to overturn isoneutral surfaces and a mesoscale eddy-induced cell that acts to flatten those surfaces. In this paradigm, the Southern Ocean overturning is portrayed to consist of upwelling of Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) along poleward-shoaling isoneutrals, and isoneutral-following, northward downwelling of denser Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) and of lighter Subantarctic Mode Water (SAMW) and Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW). Water mass transformations [defined here as transfers of water between adjacent potential temperature–salinity (θ–S) classes] are commonly assumed to be confined to the surface mixed layer. This assumption, however, appears at odds with the observation of widespread, significant, large-scale thermohaline gradients along interior isoneutral surfaces in the ACC (e.g., Zika et al. 2009) and with the wide recognition of the region as a hub of vigorous mesoscale eddy and internal wave motions [see Rintoul and Naveira Garabato (2013) and references therein], which are efficient stirrers along and across isoneutrals, respectively (Ferrari and Polzin 2005).
Motivated by this apparent inconsistency, in this article we sidestep the prevalent dynamical discussion and approach the problem from a different angle. We use measurements of the microscale signatures of isoneutral and dianeutral stirring along a section crossing the ACC to assess their relative contributions to balancing large-scale overturning. The theory of how turbulent flows propagate surface thermohaline forcing into the interior to establish the mean θ–S relationship of the ocean, which underpins our approach, is discussed in section 2. Our dataset and analysis techniques are outlined in section 3. Sections 4 and 5 present our quantification of mixing and overturning, respectively, across the ACC. Results are discussed in section 6, and our main findings are reviewed in section 7.
2. Theory
a. The mean θ–S relationship of the ocean












As discussed by Ferrari and Polzin (2005), the mean in the Osborn–Cox relation strictly includes all scales upon which microscale motions act, from the large, slowly evolving scales of the general circulation to the “intermediate” scales of mesoscale eddies and internal waves. The signatures of this collection of motions are plainly visible in the θ–S relationship characteristic of the ACC, illustrated by Fig. 1, which is based on CTD measurements across Drake Passage with a vertical resolution of O(1) m. While small-scale turbulent overturns are not resolved in this dataset, the presence of at least two other classes of flows with distinct scales is suggested in the θ–S diagram: a large-scale background with vertical scales of O(100–1000) m, which is laterally coherent on horizontal scales of O(100) km, is largely stable on time scales of years to decades and is associated with the general circulation; and finescale structure with vertical scales of O(10–100) m, which is laterally incoherent on horizontal scales of O(1–10) km, is variable on time scales of days and is associated with intermediate-scale motions [primarily mesoscale eddies; see, e.g., Polzin and Ferrari (2004) and Naveira Garabato et al. (2011, hereinafter referred to as NG11)]. We refer the reader to appendix B of NG11 for an extensive discussion of the rationale for our interpretation of the thermohaline finestructure in the ACC as arising primarily from mesoscale eddy stirring.

θ–S diagram along the SR1b transect across Drake Passage in December 1997/January 1998. θ–S curves are colored according to the interfrontal zone in which they lie. Selected neutral density contours (computed as polynomial fits to the neutral density data of the Southern Ocean Database; see http://wocesoatlas.tamu.edu) are shown in black. Major water masses (AABW; AAIW; SAMW; UCDW/LCDW; WW) and fronts (PF; SACCF; SAF; SBdy = Southern Boundary) are labeled. The section location and characteristic frontal positions are indicated in Fig. 2. (Adapted from NG11.).
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

θ–S diagram along the SR1b transect across Drake Passage in December 1997/January 1998. θ–S curves are colored according to the interfrontal zone in which they lie. Selected neutral density contours (computed as polynomial fits to the neutral density data of the Southern Ocean Database; see http://wocesoatlas.tamu.edu) are shown in black. Major water masses (AABW; AAIW; SAMW; UCDW/LCDW; WW) and fronts (PF; SACCF; SAF; SBdy = Southern Boundary) are labeled. The section location and characteristic frontal positions are indicated in Fig. 2. (Adapted from NG11.).
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
θ–S diagram along the SR1b transect across Drake Passage in December 1997/January 1998. θ–S curves are colored according to the interfrontal zone in which they lie. Selected neutral density contours (computed as polynomial fits to the neutral density data of the Southern Ocean Database; see http://wocesoatlas.tamu.edu) are shown in black. Major water masses (AABW; AAIW; SAMW; UCDW/LCDW; WW) and fronts (PF; SACCF; SAF; SBdy = Southern Boundary) are labeled. The section location and characteristic frontal positions are indicated in Fig. 2. (Adapted from NG11.).
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
















Expression (10) is formally valid to the extent that potential temperature fluctuations are generated by local stirring of the large-scale gradient (i.e., advection of potential temperature variance from regions upstream is assumed to be negligible) and insofar as
b. The overturning circulation across the ACC



















3. Data and analysis
a. Data
The data analyzed here consist of hydrographic, velocity, and microstructure measurements collected during three repeats of the SR1b section across the eastern Drake Passage (Fig. 2), under the auspices of the Diapycnal and Isopycnal Mixing Experiment in the Southern Ocean [DIMES; see Sheen et al. (2013) and references therein]. The SR1b section crosses the two major ACC jets in the region, associated with the Subantarctic Front (SAF) and Polar Front (PF). The details of each of the section occupations considered in this study are provided by Table 1.

Position of the SR1b repeat section (in black). Surface eddy kinetic energy calculated from the AVISO gridded altimetry product for 1992–2011 is shown in color. Mean dynamic topography contours at intervals of 0.1 m are indicated in gray (Maximenko et al. 2009). Characteristic frontal positions are marked, with labels defined in Fig. 1. YB denotes the Yaghan basin.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

Position of the SR1b repeat section (in black). Surface eddy kinetic energy calculated from the AVISO gridded altimetry product for 1992–2011 is shown in color. Mean dynamic topography contours at intervals of 0.1 m are indicated in gray (Maximenko et al. 2009). Characteristic frontal positions are marked, with labels defined in Fig. 1. YB denotes the Yaghan basin.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Position of the SR1b repeat section (in black). Surface eddy kinetic energy calculated from the AVISO gridded altimetry product for 1992–2011 is shown in color. Mean dynamic topography contours at intervals of 0.1 m are indicated in gray (Maximenko et al. 2009). Characteristic frontal positions are marked, with labels defined in Fig. 1. YB denotes the Yaghan basin.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
SR1b repeat section occupations analyzed in this study. The cruise code, vessel, and dates of and data collected in each occupation are listed. RRS stands for Royal Research Ship.


Profiles of temperature, salinity, and pressure were obtained with a SeaBird 911 Plus CTD at an effective vertical resolution of O(1) m. The accuracy of temperature measurements was 0.001°C, and that of the salinity measurements was 0.002 after calibration by reference to bottle salinity samples analyzed on a Guildline 8400B salinometer using the International Association for the Physical Sciences of the Oceans (IAPSO) P-series standard seawater. Profiles of horizontal velocity were obtained with a downward-looking 300-kHz Teledyne RDI lowered acoustic Doppler current profiler (LADCP) mounted on the CTD frame and programmed to obtain beam-coordinate velocities in 8-m bins. The LADCP data were processed using the velocity-inversion method of Visbeck (2002), of which the velocity referencing stage was accomplished with bottom-track LADCP, shipboard ADCP, and vessel global positioning system data. Further details on the CTD and LADCP data acquisition and processing are provided in the cruise reports (Watson 2011, 2012; Sallée 2013).
Full-depth measurements of ϵ and χ were obtained using two Rockland Scientific International free-falling VMP-5500 vertical microstructure profilers (http://www.rocklandscientific.com) operated by the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. One of the instruments was deployed at most CTD stations along each SR1b section occupation and recorded vertical gradients in velocity and temperature on centimeter scales (from which ϵ and χ were respectively computed) at 512 Hz to within 100 m of the ocean floor. Data processing was conducted using algorithms developed originally for the High Resolution Profiler (Polzin and Montgomery 1996; Naveira Garabato 2009). Variances of the vertical gradients in velocity and temperature were calculated every 0.5 dbar, using bin widths of 1 s. Each VMP-5500 carried two shear probes and two fast-response thermistors, and unless one sensor of each pair was deemed noisy, the mean of the ϵ or χ estimates from each sensor pair was used. Values of ϵ were computed from the vertical shear variance
b. Analysis
The rates of mixing and overturning across the ACC are estimated from microstructure observations by applying the set of relations (7)–(8) and (14)–(15) to individual SR1b transect occupations. For each station in each section repeat, measurements of ϵ and χ are bin averaged in neutral density γn (Jackett and McDougall 1997) bins of 0.08 kg m−3, and N2 is computed in the same bins from the CTD data. The selected bin size represents a compromise between the vertical resolution and statistical robustness of the bin-averaged microstructure variables, but our results are qualitatively insensitive to this choice. To define the large-scale mean potential temperature θm along a given transect occupation, the CTD measurements of θ for that section repeat are bin averaged in the same density intervals, and a cubic spline is fitted to the binned θ values on each isoneutral surface (as in NG11). The resulting θm field contains all the large-scale features of the original potential temperature distribution, where large-scale here refers to structures that span several stations in the horizontal and several density bins in the vertical. All isoneutral and dianeutral gradients are computed using centered differencing in along-section distance–neutral density space, except for the northernmost and southernmost stations in each section occupation and for density bins adjacent to bins with absent data, for which forward or backward differencing is used. Before displaying the (isoneutral and dianeutral) turbulent potential temperature fluxes in (14) and computing their divergences, the Ke and Kt fields are smoothed with a 2D boxcar filter of width equal to double the station spacing in along-section distance and to double the bin size in γn. This exercise brings out the large-scale patterns in the turbulent potential temperature fluxes but does not significantly affect our estimates of
An alternative estimation of Ke is conducted by applying expression (11) to observations of thermohaline finestructure. We follow the methodology outlined by NG11, in which
4. Mixing across the ACC
Our calculation of the rates of dianeutral and isoneutral stirring across the ACC from microstructure observations is illustrated here by the analysis of the JC69 cruise data (Table 1). This section occupation had somewhat more regular sampling than the other two SR1b repeat microstructure transects and yields very similar results to an analysis of those transects. An overview of the hydrographic and flow structure of the ACC in the JC69 occupation is given by Figs. 3a–c, which respectively show the measured distributions of θ, N2, and flow speed with isoneutrals overlaid. The slope of the southward-shoaling isoneutrals of the ACC is punctuated by two clear inflections associated with the flow speed maxima of the SAF and PF jets. While θ and N2 are relatively homogeneous along isoneutrals below the surface mixed layer, significant isoneutral gradients in both variables occur concurrently in the uppermost ~1 km of the fronts, particularly in the transition between Winter Water (WW) and AAIW and at the poleward edge of SAMW. Note that a reversal in isoneutral slopes and water mass properties occurs in the two southernmost stations of the section, suggesting that these sampled a transient mesoscale meander of the PF.

Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) θ, (b) N2, and (c) LADCP-measured speed, in color, and (d) χ and (e) ϵ, indicated by bars. Neutral density contours are superimposed on (a)–(c) and labeled in (a). Major water masses are marked in (a) and labeled as in Fig. 1. Frontal positions are indicated in the upper axis. For reference, θ and speed are shown by the background shading in (d) and (e), respectively.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) θ, (b) N2, and (c) LADCP-measured speed, in color, and (d) χ and (e) ϵ, indicated by bars. Neutral density contours are superimposed on (a)–(c) and labeled in (a). Major water masses are marked in (a) and labeled as in Fig. 1. Frontal positions are indicated in the upper axis. For reference, θ and speed are shown by the background shading in (d) and (e), respectively.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) θ, (b) N2, and (c) LADCP-measured speed, in color, and (d) χ and (e) ϵ, indicated by bars. Neutral density contours are superimposed on (a)–(c) and labeled in (a). Major water masses are marked in (a) and labeled as in Fig. 1. Frontal positions are indicated in the upper axis. For reference, θ and speed are shown by the background shading in (d) and (e), respectively.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Microstructure estimates of ϵ and χ along the same repeat transect are presented in Figs. 3d and 3e, respectively. The two variables exhibit a broadly similar distribution, suggesting that dianeutral stirring is likely to play an important role in balancing the dissipation of temperature variance across much of the section. Elevated values (approaching or exceeding 10−9 W kg−1 in ϵ and 10−9 °C2 s−1 in χ) are generally found in the uppermost ~1 km of the water column and in the deepest ~1 km in areas of complex topography and beneath the ACC frontal jets. As discussed in section 6, the intensification of turbulent dissipation in the upper ocean occurs primarily in association with wind-generated near-inertial waves, and elevated dissipation at depth is linked to internal waves radiated as the deep ACC eddy flows impinge on rough topography. However, there are also instances of qualitative disagreement between ϵ and χ below the base of the main pycnocline at ~150 m (most clearly, in the group of isoneutrals connecting WW with AAIW), where elevated dissipation of temperature variance coincides with modest turbulent dissipation. This discrepancy hints at the local dominance of isoneutral stirring in balancing the dissipation of temperature variance.
To formally assess the relative contributions of dianeutral and isoneutral stirring to the temperature variance budget, the large-scale mean potential temperature θm is estimated, and the above measurements are reexamined in neutral density space (Fig. 4). The alignment of the steepest isoneutral slopes and the sharpest isoneutral gradients in θm (Figs. 4a,b) and in N2 (Fig. 4d) with the flow speed maxima of the SAF and PF jets (Fig. 4e) can be readily appreciated. The dianeutral gradient in θm (Fig. 4c) is most pronounced in the uppermost ~500 m throughout the section, particularly around the WW layer at and south of the PF. The broad similarity between the distributions of ϵ (Fig. 4f) and χ (Fig. 4h) and the increase of both variables in the upper ocean and near the seafloor are again apparent, as is, more subtly, the general qualitative enhancement of χ over ϵ between approximately 150 and 1000 m. While this last feature is suggestive of the significance of isoneutral stirring in that depth range, there is no obvious intensification of χ at fronts (i.e., where

Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) θm, (b)
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) θm, (b)
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) θm, (b)
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Combining N2 (Fig. 4e) and ϵ (Fig. 4f) in (7), an estimate of the dianeutral turbulent diffusivity Kt is obtained (Fig. 4h). Elevated values of Kt approaching 10−4 m2 s−1 are common near the sea surface and in the vicinity of the ACC jets at depths exceeding ~1000 m, whereas diffusivities that are smaller by one order of magnitude are characteristic of the intervening depth range. See Sheen et al. (2013, 2014) for a detailed discussion of the distribution and physical controls of Kt along the SR1b section.
A direct comparison between the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ/2 and the rate of production by dianeutral stirring

(a) Mean profiles of (left) the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ/2 (gray bars) and the rate of dianeutral production of temperature variance
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

(a) Mean profiles of (left) the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ/2 (gray bars) and the rate of dianeutral production of temperature variance
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
(a) Mean profiles of (left) the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ/2 (gray bars) and the rate of dianeutral production of temperature variance
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
A decomposition of the section-mean profiles of the rates of dissipation and dianeutral production of temperature variance into areas between and within fronts (Fig. 5b) reveals that the importance of isoneutral production in intermediate density classes pertains primarily to frontal regions. Outside the fronts, there is a near-ubiquitous balance between dissipation and dianeutral production. This general pattern is also apparent in the station-by-station comparison conducted in Fig. 6a, where χ/2 and

Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ/2 (gray bars) and the rate of dianeutral production of temperature variance
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ/2 (gray bars) and the rate of dianeutral production of temperature variance
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Meridional sections along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of (a) the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ/2 (gray bars) and the rate of dianeutral production of temperature variance
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Substituting the rates of dissipation and dianeutral production of temperature variance and
5. Overturning circulation across the ACC
If the thermohaline structure of the ACC is to remain in an approximately stationary state in the presence of the distributions of (isoneutral and dianeutral) turbulent stirring diagnosed above (Figs. 6b and 4h, respectively), a cross-ACC overturning circulation must exist. In the limit represented by (14), this circulation is associated with an isoneutral advection of mean potential temperature
As outlined in section 2b, we caution that this exercise represents a specific interpretation of the regional overturning circulation implied by the observed patterns of stirring. It is not a rigorous assessment of the actual overturning because we lack prior knowledge of the extent to which the assumptions made in deriving (14) hold in our study area and of the degree of undersampling of the key stirring patterns in our dataset. To minimize the influence of these limitations, which is likely to be exacerbated at the spatial scales of the ACC jets (e.g., Abernathey and Marshall 2013), we estimate section-characteristic profiles of all terms on the right-hand side of (14) by focusing on the largest horizontal and vertical scales captured by our measurements. As this approach yields a physically plausible overturning circulation, we deduce that (14) provides a reasonable description of the ACC-wide balance between stirring and overturning in our study region.
The distribution of the isoneutral potential temperature flux entering the first term on the right-hand side of (14) for the JC69 data is shown in Fig. 7a. As might be expected from the stochasticity of the measured microscale variables and the “snapshot” character of the observations,

(a) Meridional section along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

(a) Meridional section along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
(a) Meridional section along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
To estimate the contribution of mesoscale eddy stirring to balancing meridional overturning in a manner that is robust to grid-scale variability and uncertainty in Ke and θm, we calculate section-characteristic vertical profiles of
Next, we examine the distribution of the dianeutral potential temperature flux entering the second term on the right-hand side of (14) for the JC69 data, shown in Fig. 8a. There is a clear tendency for

(a) Meridional section along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

(a) Meridional section along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
(a) Meridional section along the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
The contribution of dianeutral stirring to meridional overturning is estimated as the ratio between the dianeutral divergence of
To conclude, we consider the component of meridional–isoneutral flow balanced by dianeutral advection of mean potential temperature, that is, the third term on the right-hand side of (14). To quantify this component for the JC69 dataset, we first estimate the dianeutral residual-mean velocity

Section-characteristic profiles of log10(N2), log10(ε),
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

Section-characteristic profiles of log10(N2), log10(ε),
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Section-characteristic profiles of log10(N2), log10(ε),
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
The contributions of isoneutral stirring, dianeutral stirring, and dianeutral advection to the estimate of meridional–isoneutral flow are synthesized by Fig. 10. Contributions to

Section-characteristic profile for the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

Section-characteristic profile for the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Section-characteristic profile for the JC69 occupation of the SR1b transect of
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
6. Discussion
The picture of the rate, density structure, and mechanistic attribution of the overturning circulation across the ACC in Drake Passage emerging from the JC69 data and synthesized by Fig. 10 is grounded on two key features: a one to two orders of magnitude suppression of eddy-induced isoneutral stirring in the upper kilometer of the ACC frontal jets and a characteristic order of magnitude intensification of turbulent dissipation and dianeutral stirring in the subpycnocline and deepest layers of the ACC. The microstructure data for the JR276 and JR281 transects do not lend themselves to direct estimation of the meridional–isoneutral flow. Unfavorable weather conditions during those cruises resulted in considerable sampling gaps in one or both of the major ACC frontal jets, thereby preventing the robust estimation of the isoneutral gradients in (14). However, we will show in the following that the two key features underpinning the view of meridional overturning constructed from the JC69 measurements are quantitatively endorsed by the other two datasets.
An overview of the evidence of suppression of eddy-induced isoneutral stirring in the ACC frontal jets in all three microstructure transects is provided by Fig. 11. There, it is shown that in all transects the rate of dissipation of temperature variance χ increases modestly (typically by less than one order of magnitude) between areas of weak flow and the ACC frontal jet cores, where flow speeds of ~0.5 m s−1 are regularly observed (Fig. 11a). The amplitude of the isoneutral gradient of θm exhibits a more marked, one order of magnitude enhancement between interfrontal and frontal zones. Since the rate of production of temperature variance by isoneutral stirring

Estimates of (a) χ and (b) Ke (colored symbols, shaded by
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1

Estimates of (a) χ and (b) Ke (colored symbols, shaded by
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
Estimates of (a) χ and (b) Ke (colored symbols, shaded by
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 46, 1; 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0025.1
It is the comparatively pronounced frontal reduction of Ke (relative to the more moderate frontal enhancement of



The general consistence between our Ke diagnostics and the theoretical scaling of FN10 echoes recent successful tests of their model at the mesoscale (i.e. the scale of turbulent production of tracer variance; see FN10 and Klocker and Abernathey 2014). Similar to those assessments, which were based on the advection of a synthetic tracer by satellite altimetry-derived velocity fields, the analysis of thermohaline finestructure measurements of NG11 provided broad endorsement of the scaling. Note, though, that the results of NG11 also pointed to a significant shortcoming in the theory’s predictions, which appears at odds with the findings of the present work. To illustrate this issue, we consider the distribution of the finestructure-derived estimate of Ke for the SR1b section (updated from NG11; see section 3b), superimposed on the seafloor-referenced geostrophic velocity averaged over all the section repeats considered in the finestructure-based calculation (Fig. 6c). The mean geostrophic velocity structure of the SAF and PF jets resembles that in the LADCP survey conducted during the JC69 cruise (Fig. 4e), although peak speeds at the jet cores are typically higher by ~0.1 m s−1 in the LADCP data. A comparison with the distribution of the microstructure-derived Ke (Fig. 6b) reveals that the two sets of Ke estimates have two main features in common, namely, the occurrence of higher-quartile diffusivities of O(103) m2 s−1, which are in line with estimates based on the dispersion of a natural tracer in the vicinity of the SR1b transect (Naveira Garabato et al. 2007), and the pronounced reduction of Ke at the core of the PF jet relative to its surroundings. However, they also exhibit two clear differences, specifically, the occurrence of lower-quartile diffusivities that are one order of magnitude larger in the finestructure case [O(102) m2 s−1, cf. O(10) m2 s−1 for microstructure-derived diffusivities] and the absence of a reduction of Ke at the core of the SAF jet in the finestructure case.



The longevity of thermohaline variance in the ACC provides insight into why the potential temperature variance budget in (6), which entails approximations that are difficult to justify a priori (section 2a), yields a realistic distribution of Ke when applied to local hydrographic and microstructure observations. The relatively inefficient downscale cascade of thermohaline variance implied by the variance’s long persistence suggests that the prominent along-stream variations known to occur in variance production (e.g., Thompson and Naveira Garabato 2014) are slow to be imprinted on the large-scale mean θ–S relationship of the ACC and are unlikely to result in analogous marked changes in variance dissipation. Thus, the large-scale mean θm field entering (6), derived from measurements at a specific section, is representative of a sector extending O(1000) km upstream and not just of local value. We suggest that this property underpins the success of the gravest empirical mode approaches in representing the zonal evolution of the ACC’s hydrographic structure from scattered observations (Meijers et al. 2011). Similarly, local measurements of χ at our transect arguably reflect variance production over a substantial upstream region, greater than the O(100–500) km horizontal scale below which the assumptions made in deriving (6) may break down (section 2a). We conclude that the long persistence of thermohaline variance in the ACC makes it possible to obtain meaningful information on the patterns of cross-stream isoneutral stirring from localized measurements.
As remarked above, the significant contribution of dianeutral stirring to meridional overturning across the lightest and densest layers of the ACC documented in the JC69 dataset is contingent on a characteristic order of magnitude enhancement of the rates of turbulent dissipation and dianeutral stirring in those layers. Analysis of the JR276 and JR281 microstructure measurements corroborates the persistent nature of this feature, as illustrated by the comparison of section-mean profiles of the dianeutral turbulent potential temperature flux
The distinctive vertical distribution of
7. Conclusions
We have shown that a picture of mixing and overturning across a region of the ACC can be constructed from a relatively modest number of (shear and temperature) microstructure profiles. The microstructure measurements are analyzed in the framework of a triple decomposition applied to the temperature variance budget [(6)], in which the dissipation of variance by molecular mixing is balanced by the production of variance associated with mesoscale eddy-induced isoneutral stirring and with dianeutral stirring by small-scale turbulence, acting on the large-scale mean state. This balance is established on a time scale of O(1) yr, such that newly produced variance is advected downstream by the ACC over O(1000) km before being dissipated. Our overarching result is that the rates of isoneutral and dianeutral stirring exhibit distinct, characteristic, relatively abrupt variations that are pivotal to the sustainment of an overturning circulation of O(1) mm s−1 across the ACC’s mean thermohaline structure. The overturning is found to consist of northward flow above the γn ≈ 27.5 kg m−3 isoneutral and southward flow below. Isoneutral and dianeutral stirring play complementary roles in balancing the overturning, with isoneutral processes prevailing in the 27.2 < γn < 27.9 kg m−3 class (encompassing WW/AAIW and UCDW) and dianeutral processes dominating in the lightest (γn < 27.2 kg m−3, which mainly includes waters below the base of the seasonal pycnocline) and densest [γn > 27.9 kg m−3, largely composed of Lower Circumpolar Deep Water (LCDW)] layers.
The single most prominent feature of the distribution of eddy stirring across the ACC is its suppression by the strong mean flow within the upper ~1 km of ACC frontal jets, a phenomenon that may be understood using simple kinematic arguments (FN10; NG11). Thermohaline variance is observed to be injected into the approximate 500–1000-m depth range of the ACC interior from frontal sites where isoneutrals outcrop into the remnant winter mixed layer, found at depths of 100–200 m in our study region. Subduction and equatorward flow of these waters is facilitated by the marked suppression of eddy stirring at the fronts, which overcomes the equatorward reduction in the isoneutral temperature gradient to yield an equatorward enhancement of the isoneutral turbulent potential temperature flux. We suggest that frontal suppression of eddy stirring may, in this way, underpin the general observation that density classes outcropping at fronts in winter are selected for subduction into the interior across the global ocean (Speer and Forget 2013).
The prevalent role of dianeutral stirring by small-scale turbulence in balancing meridional flow in the lightest and densest layers of the ACC interior relates to the proximity of those layers to the two primary sources of internal waves in the study region, which results in a pronounced intensification of small-scale turbulence in the uppermost ~1 km and deepest 1–2 km. While this stress on the significance of dianeutral stirring in the Southern Ocean overturning appears at odds with the extensive characterization of the interior circulation in terms of adiabatic processes, our findings resonate with those of several recent studies. For example, Sloyan et al. (2010) show that small-scale turbulence below the seasonal pycnocline exerts a major preconditioning influence on wintertime SAMW formation in the southeast Pacific, in line with our conclusion that water mass transformations at that level are controlled by near-inertial wave breaking and possibly other dianeutral processes in the transition layer. Similarly, the likely importance of dianeutral mixing in the deep Southern Ocean in sustaining abyssal overturning is highlighted by several authors (Ito and Marshall 2008; Nikurashin and Ferrari 2013; Broadbridge et al. 2015, manuscript submitted to Geophys. Res. Lett.).
Our estimate of the regional overturning flow is comparable in structure and magnitude to that implicit in the zonally integrated Southern Ocean overturning diagnosed in many realistic eddy-permitting numerical models [see Marshall and Speer (2012) and Rintoul and Naveira Garabato (2013) and references therein] and from a circumpolar hydrographic climatology (Zika et al. 2009). The latter study is grounded in a formulation analogous to (14) and shows that a plausible zonally integrated overturning across the ACC’s mean thermohaline structure can be sustained in the absence of isoneutral gradients in the rate of eddy stirring. This apparent contradiction with our findings may be resolved by considering the very different spatiotemporal averaging in Zika et al.’s circumpolar-integrated application, which, unlike our approach, smears out ACC frontal features and their eddy stirring suppression signatures.
Acknowledgments
The DIMES experiment was funded by the U.K. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). ACNG acknowledges the support of a Philip Leverhulme Prize, the Royal Society, and the Wolfson Foundation. JDZ acknowledges the support of a NERC Research Fellowship.
APPENDIX
Uncertainty in the Microstructure-Based Diagnostics of the Rates of Mixing and Overturning
The uncertainties in our microstructure-based diagnostics of Kt, Ke, and
a. Uncertainty in ϵ, χ, Kt, and 

The uncertainties of bin-averaged ϵ and χ values are estimated here as 90% confidence intervals via a bootstrap method (Efron and Gong 1983), following Waterman et al. (2013). The quoted confidence intervals represent the fifth largest and smallest values of 100 sums formed by randomly sampling the data. Uncertainties in ϵ and χ computed in this manner characteristically decrease from a factor of 2–3 in the lightest, thinnest layers to less than a factor of 2 for layers deeper than ~500 m. While these uncertainties are not displayed in section plots for reasons of clarity, they are quoted as and when appropriate and are propagated through to derived variables.
The uncertainty in bin-averaged Kt, which is proportional to the ratio of ϵ to N2 [see (7)], is dominated by the uncertainty in ϵ and is only slightly augmented (typically by less than a factor of 2) by uncertainty in the computation of bin-averaged N2. The fractional uncertainty in section-averaged
b. Uncertainty in θm, Ke, and 

The uncertainty in θm is estimated at any one bin in each section occupation as the rms value of the differences between the original potential temperature measurements within that bin and the local θm computed from all the stations in the transect save the station of the bin under consideration. The resulting error fields reveal negligible (typically <5% of the range of temperatures found along the relevant isoneutral) uncertainties in θm at depths in excess of ~300 m, with more substantial uncertainties (of up to 30% of the temperature range of the isoneutral) at the locations of isoneutral outcrops into the remnant winter mixed layer. Isoneutral and dianeutral gradients of θm are similarly most uncertain near these outcrop sites, with their magnitudes (not their signs) exhibiting some sensitivity to the degree of smoothing of the cubic spline used in defining θm. Note, though, that the highest uncertainties in the gradient magnitudes never exceed a factor of 2 and so can be regarded as modest relative to uncertainties in microstructure-based variables.
The uncertainty in Ke [see (8)] is primarily dictated by those in χ and Kt, with errors in the gradients of θm contributing the most at the ~20% level at outcrop sites. Assuming uncertainties in χ and Kt to be independent, their combined effect yields characteristic uncertainties in Ke of a factor of 3–4 around and above the base of the winter mixed layer (i.e., in the uppermost ~300 m) and of a factor of 2–3 at greater depth. The validity of these uncertainty estimates is endorsed by computations of the ratio
The uncertainty in our estimates of the contribution of isoneutral stirring to
The uncertainties in our estimates of the contributions of dianeutral stirring and dianeutral advection to
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Note that the definition of the residual-mean velocity is formally tracer dependent. Although here we adopt a definition in terms of θ, as appropriate to our analysis, we expect this residual-mean velocity to apply approximately to other climatically important tracers with regional distributions that are closely related to that of θ (e.g., S and biogeochemical tracers).