1. Introduction
Conceptual models have clarified scientific understanding of the ocean’s deep stratification and meridional overturning circulation (MOC), while making predictions that may be tested via observations and numerical modeling. Our conceptual understanding has evolved, with two end points being the uniform vertical advective–diffusive balance assumed by Munk (1966) and the theory posited by Nikurashin and Vallis (2011, hereafter NV11), sketched in Fig. 1. This more recent view recognizes that the diapycnal diffusivity is an order of magnitude smaller than the estimate of Munk (1966) (e.g., Ledwell et al. 1993), and so transport is typically directed along isopycnals in the ocean interior (Lumpkin and Speer 2007). The purpose of this note is to highlight that, while the NV11 conceptual model illustrates the importance of the Southern Ocean in the setting, the global stratification, and MOC, it may change dramatically with the with improved representation of the dynamics in this region, especially at the Antarctic margins. As an example, modification of the surface boundary condition over the Southern Ocean dramatically alters the sensitivities of the deep stratification and MOC to diapycnal mixing.

A schematic of the residual-mean model of the deep overturning circulation. In the Southern Ocean channel (y < 0), the deep circulation is directed along isopycnals, and is constructed as a residual of a wind-driven mean circulation that tends to steepen isopycnals and the opposing “eddy” circulation that relaxes isopycnals by releasing potential energy through baroclinic instability (Karsten and Marshall 2002). The circulation is closed by buoyancy loss to the atmosphere, which supports a southward diabatic transport in the surface mixed layer, and by downward diapycnal diffusion of buoyancy in the northern basin (y > 0), which supports upwelling across isopycnal surfaces.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1

A schematic of the residual-mean model of the deep overturning circulation. In the Southern Ocean channel (y < 0), the deep circulation is directed along isopycnals, and is constructed as a residual of a wind-driven mean circulation that tends to steepen isopycnals and the opposing “eddy” circulation that relaxes isopycnals by releasing potential energy through baroclinic instability (Karsten and Marshall 2002). The circulation is closed by buoyancy loss to the atmosphere, which supports a southward diabatic transport in the surface mixed layer, and by downward diapycnal diffusion of buoyancy in the northern basin (y > 0), which supports upwelling across isopycnal surfaces.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
A schematic of the residual-mean model of the deep overturning circulation. In the Southern Ocean channel (y < 0), the deep circulation is directed along isopycnals, and is constructed as a residual of a wind-driven mean circulation that tends to steepen isopycnals and the opposing “eddy” circulation that relaxes isopycnals by releasing potential energy through baroclinic instability (Karsten and Marshall 2002). The circulation is closed by buoyancy loss to the atmosphere, which supports a southward diabatic transport in the surface mixed layer, and by downward diapycnal diffusion of buoyancy in the northern basin (y > 0), which supports upwelling across isopycnal surfaces.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
The deep cell of the MOC is supplied by the outflow of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW; Gordon 2009), upwells via the action of diapycnal mixing, and returns to the surface via outcropping isopycnal surfaces in the Southern Ocean (Lumpkin and Speer 2007). This circulation is of interest because it may control the ocean–atmosphere CO2 partitioning over millennial time scales (Skinner et al. 2010). This has motivated a series of investigations of the sensitivity of the deep MOC, for example, to changes in surface forcing (Stewart and Thompson 2012; Meredith et al. 2012).
The role of conceptual models is to summarize in a clear and accessible way the mechanisms that control the deep stratification and MOC. The landmark study of Munk (1966) assumed the deep circulation to consist of uniform upwelling supported by downward diffusive fluxes, and established that a diapycnal diffusivity of κ ≈ 1 × 10−4 m2 s−1 was required to balance the export of AABW. This model dominated thinking for decades until direct measurements of mixing rates in the upper ocean established that the diffusivity is closer to κ ≈ 1 × 10−5 m2 s−1 (Ledwell et al. 1993). The implication that transport in the ocean interior is largely along isopycnals emphasizes the role of the Southern Ocean in closing water mass pathways, and is reflected in models like that of Gnanadesikan (1999), later extended to include the deep cell by Shakespeare and Hogg (2012). Ito and Marshall (2008) proposed a residual-mean model in which lateral mixing by mesoscale eddies and enhanced diapycnal mixing at depth constrain water mass transformation in the deep ocean, and thus the strength of the deep MOC.
The most recent dynamically consistent model of the deep cell is that of NV11, which agrees qualitatively with observations of the deep MOC (Lumpkin and Speer 2007). Their scalings for the sensitivity of the deep stratification and MOC to diapycnal mixing are corroborated by coarse-resolution simulations with a Gent and McWilliams (1990) parameterization, and agree qualitatively with the eddy-resolving simulations conducted by Munday et al. (2013). Here we identify the Southern Ocean surface buoyancy condition as an unexplored, but critical, component of this model that has received little attention and is poorly understood.
We demonstrate that a straightforward but plausible change in the surface boundary condition in a NV11-like configuration qualitatively changes the properties of the model. NV11 apply a fixed-buoyancy profile at the ocean surface, which is a suitable approximation for the strong restoring to atmospheric temperature acting along the Antarctic Circumpolar Current latitudes (Haney 1971). However, this boundary condition is not appropriate for the coastal regions of Antarctica in which AABW is formed. For example, brine rejection in nearshore polynyas may be more closely approximated as a fixed surface buoyancy flux (Chapman 1999; Wilchinsky and Feltham 2008). Here, we contrast the sensitivity of the model’s deep stratification and MOC to the diapycnal diffusivity κ in the limiting cases of a prescribed surface buoyancy versus a prescribed surface flux.
2. Scalings for deep stratification and overturning
a. Residual-mean model
We employ the conceptual model of NV11, illustrated in Fig. 1. For simplicity we restrict our attention to the deepest cell of the MOC, which is permitted to occupy the entire water column. We could restrict the deep cell to below 2–3-km depth, as in the real ocean, but our results would not change qualitatively.
















b. Fixed surface buoyancy








c. Fixed surface flux
We now consider the case of a fixed surface buoyancy flux at the ocean surface. This is arguably a more appropriate boundary condition where salinity plays an important role in setting buoyancy variations, like under ice.













Plots of surface properties in the Southern Ocean channel: (a) the buoyancy profile bs, (b) the downward buoyancy flux converted to an equivalent energy flux Q = ρ0CpB/αg, and (c) the streamfunction ψ as derived in section 2. In each case the diapycnal diffusivity is κ = 5 × 10−5 m2 s−1.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1

Plots of surface properties in the Southern Ocean channel: (a) the buoyancy profile bs, (b) the downward buoyancy flux converted to an equivalent energy flux Q = ρ0CpB/αg, and (c) the streamfunction ψ as derived in section 2. In each case the diapycnal diffusivity is κ = 5 × 10−5 m2 s−1.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
Plots of surface properties in the Southern Ocean channel: (a) the buoyancy profile bs, (b) the downward buoyancy flux converted to an equivalent energy flux Q = ρ0CpB/αg, and (c) the streamfunction ψ as derived in section 2. In each case the diapycnal diffusivity is κ = 5 × 10−5 m2 s−1.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
List of parameters used in our analytical scaling and numerical solutions.







Dependence of the max overturning ψmax = maxy,z|ψ| on the diapycnal diffusivity κ for different surface buoyancy flux profiles B(y). The total buoyancy loss at the ocean surface is the same for each profile. The parameters otherwise match those listed in Table 1.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1

Dependence of the max overturning ψmax = maxy,z|ψ| on the diapycnal diffusivity κ for different surface buoyancy flux profiles B(y). The total buoyancy loss at the ocean surface is the same for each profile. The parameters otherwise match those listed in Table 1.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
Dependence of the max overturning ψmax = maxy,z|ψ| on the diapycnal diffusivity κ for different surface buoyancy flux profiles B(y). The total buoyancy loss at the ocean surface is the same for each profile. The parameters otherwise match those listed in Table 1.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
3. Numerical sensitivity to diapycnal mixing
a. Numerical configuration










Rather than impose Eqs. (7) or (11) directly on z = 0, we have found that the stability and accuracy of the solution are improved by enforcing these conditions over a layer of finite depth Hs = 100 m close to the surface. For the fixed-flux case in Eq. (11) we impose a downward buoyancy flux B that decreases linearly in magnitude from z = 0 to z = −Hs. For the fixed-buoyancy case in Eq. (7) we replace the fixed-buoyancy flux B with a relaxative flux Ws(b − bs). The surface piston velocity Ws = 5 × 10−5 m s−1 restores the surface buoyancy with a time scale of around 3 weeks.
b. Sensitivity to diapycnal mixing
In Fig. 4 we plot the numerically computed stratification and overturning in the fixed-buoyancy and fixed-flux cases, for κ ranging over two orders of magnitude. Over this range the overturning at y = 0 varies by 0.68 m2 s−1 in the fixed-buoyancy case, and only by 0.26 m2 s−1 in the fixed-flux case. This is consistent with our scalings in section 2, which suggest that the overturning should scale linearly with κ in the fixed-buoyancy case, and as κ1/2 in the fixed-flux case (see Fig. 3). In contrast the stratification exhibits almost no change in the fixed-buoyancy case, but varies by an order of magnitude in the fixed-flux case.

Plots of the numerically computed buoyancy b (10−2 m s−2; solid contours) and overturning streamfunction ψ (m2 s−1; dashed contours) for diapycnal diffusivities of (a),(d) κ = 5 × 10−6 m2 s−1; (b),(e) κ = 5 × 10−5 m2 s−1; and (c),(f) κ = 5 × 10−4 m2 s−1. In (a)–(c), the fixed surface buoyancy profile in Eq. (15) is employed, while in (d)–(f) the fixed surface flux condition in Eq. (16) is employed. All other parameters are listed in Table 1. Note the larger buoyancy contour intervals in (d). The dashed contour interval in each panel is one-tenth of the max overturning strength.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1

Plots of the numerically computed buoyancy b (10−2 m s−2; solid contours) and overturning streamfunction ψ (m2 s−1; dashed contours) for diapycnal diffusivities of (a),(d) κ = 5 × 10−6 m2 s−1; (b),(e) κ = 5 × 10−5 m2 s−1; and (c),(f) κ = 5 × 10−4 m2 s−1. In (a)–(c), the fixed surface buoyancy profile in Eq. (15) is employed, while in (d)–(f) the fixed surface flux condition in Eq. (16) is employed. All other parameters are listed in Table 1. Note the larger buoyancy contour intervals in (d). The dashed contour interval in each panel is one-tenth of the max overturning strength.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
Plots of the numerically computed buoyancy b (10−2 m s−2; solid contours) and overturning streamfunction ψ (m2 s−1; dashed contours) for diapycnal diffusivities of (a),(d) κ = 5 × 10−6 m2 s−1; (b),(e) κ = 5 × 10−5 m2 s−1; and (c),(f) κ = 5 × 10−4 m2 s−1. In (a)–(c), the fixed surface buoyancy profile in Eq. (15) is employed, while in (d)–(f) the fixed surface flux condition in Eq. (16) is employed. All other parameters are listed in Table 1. Note the larger buoyancy contour intervals in (d). The dashed contour interval in each panel is one-tenth of the max overturning strength.
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
In Fig. 5 we compare the numerically calculated maximum overturning and stratification with the scalings derived in section 2, for a range of κ between 10−6 and 10−3 m2 s−1. For κ larger than this, the overturning cell begins to interact with the bottom boundary. The scalings are quantitatively accurate as long as κ is sufficiently small, as one would expect from the small-ε approximation in Eq. (3). The discrepancy between our scaling and the numerical results in Fig. 5b is due to diffusive modification of the overturning streamfunction ψ along isopycnals in the channel. Some discrepancy is present for all values of κ, no matter how small, because the maximum stratification scales as

Sensitivity of (a),(b) the max overturning strength ψmax and (c),(d) the max stratification
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1

Sensitivity of (a),(b) the max overturning strength ψmax and (c),(d) the max stratification
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
Sensitivity of (a),(b) the max overturning strength ψmax and (c),(d) the max stratification
Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 44, 3; 10.1175/JPO-D-13-0206.1
In the fixed-buoyancy case the overturning appears to undergo transition to a large-κ regime in which ψmax ~ κ1/2, as in NV11. The stratification also undergoes a transition, scaling approximately as
4. Discussion
We have extended the conceptual model of NV11 to demonstrate that the sensitivities of the deep stratification
For the purpose of illustration we have focused on one particular property of the NV11 model: its sensitivity to diapycnal mixing. A complete study would covary many of the model parameters (e.g., the wind stress τ, eddy diffusivity K, and diapycnal diffusivity κ). NV11 argued that their model suggested that the deep ocean overturning is sensitive to diapycnal mixing rates, while the stratification is set by the surface boundary conditions in the Southern Ocean independently of diapycnal mixing. This result overturned the traditional view pioneered by Munk (1966), who argued that the ocean stratification is set by diapycnal mixing alone. We have shown that the result of NV11 depends on the choice of surface boundary condition. NV11 used a fixed-buoyancy boundary condition, appropriate for waters that outcrop equatorward of the sea ice line and are strongly restored to atmospheric temperature. Switching to fixed-flux boundary conditions more appropriate to describe the waters that outcrop around the Antarctic continent, we find that both the stratification and overturning become sensitive to diapycnal mixing, but at rates depending on the specific latitudinal distribution of the fluxes. In reality the ocean surface is likely subject to a combination of these two boundary conditions. M. Nikurashin (2013, personal communication) plans to extend our work in an upcoming paper and quantify the relative importance of these two forcings in the present ocean.
Acknowledgments
A. L. S.’s and A. F. T.’s research was supported NSF Award OCE-1235488. R. F. acknowledges support through NSF Award OCE-1232962. The authors thank Maxim Nikurashin and two anonymous reviewers for comments that improved the manuscript.
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