ORE Seminar: Spice, Stratification and Sound

March 27, 1:00pm - 2:00pm
Mānoa Campus, POST 723

Temperature and salinity (T–S) can vary strongly along density surfaces in the upper ocean, a quantity known as spice, without directly modifying stratification. This density-compensated variability does not directly drive dynamics, yet plays an important role in water mass characterization, tracer transport, and the evolution of upper-ocean structure. In regions influenced by fronts, river discharge, or strong surface forcing, spice produces temperature inversions and shifting stratification regimes with important consequences for tracer distribution and diapycnal mixing. Spice variability also has important implications for sound propagation. In this seminar, I use spice as a diagnostic tool to examine along-isopycnal T–S variability in a frontal region where the background water mass structure supports large, density-compensated gradients. A key part of this work relies on microstructure profilers and fast towed CTD profiles, allowing direct observation of turbulent dissipation and fine-scale stratification features. Together, these observations shed light on how spice shapes diapycnal mixing and water mass transformation, and how that same variability propagates into sound-speed structure in a dynamically evolving upper ocean. Speaker: Alejandra "Ale" Sanchez-rios; Assistant Professor in the Department of Oceanography, SOEST


Event Sponsor
Ocean and Resources Engineering, Mānoa Campus

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