Researchers

Matthew Alford

Affiliate Principal Oceanographer

OPD Department

APL-UW

Affiliate Professor, Oceanography

James Girton

Principal Oceanographer

OPD Department

APL-UW

Affiliate Assistant Professor, Oceanography

John Mickett

Senior Oceanographer

OPD Department

APL-UW

Gunnar Voet

Research Associate

OPD Department

APL-UW

Funding

NSF

Wave Chasers

Deep Flows Through the Samoan Passage

3rd & Final Cruise
Instruments + Measurements
Crush Cam
Cultural Exchanges

It’s just one of these incredibly special places in the ocean where you can measure the incoming properties of the fluid and measure the outgoing properties and there is really a big, measurable difference.

This Antarctic bottom water is of interest because it’s the main supply for deep water in the Pacific Ocean because there’s no deep water created anywhere in the North Pacific. All of the water in the North Pacific at the bottom has to have come through this pathway.

January – February 2014 'Processes' Cruise

Motivation & Experiment

The Wave Chasers team went back for the third and final time to the Samoan Passage in early 2014. The first cruise in 2011 mapped the deep choke point separating the North and South Pacific oceans, and the next measured the flows that funnel through. Now they are recovering moorings that have been monitoring the flows for a year and using the ship's instruments to make detailed measurements of the turbulence.

The Samoan Passage, 5500 m beneath the sea surface, is one of the "choke points" in the abyssal circulation. A veritable river of Antarctic Bottom water flows through it on its way into the North Pacific. As it enters the constriction, substantial turbulence, hydraulic processes, and internal waves must occur, which modify the water.

Because climate models do not do a good job of resolving flows like these, we will take our stable of instruments – moored profilers, conventional current meter moorings, and shipboard instruments – and measure the velocity, turbulence, and internal waves in the region. The overall goal is to understand these deep processes and the way they impact the flow, and to develop a strategy for eventually monitoring the flow through the Samoan Passage.

Experiment Sketch

The Samoan Passage Abyssal Mixing Experiment was three cruises over three years, each about 40 days long. During the first the seafloor was mapped as never before. On the second, the flow passages and pathways were mapped. We also deployed a long-term array of moorings that stayed in the water until the third cruise. On our final cruise to the region, the 'processes' cruise, we tried to measure in detail the incredible physics involved as the water flows through the passage.

We returned to the Samoan Passage for the third and final time to retrieve the long-term mooring array and to focus on the processes that are driving the turbulence and flow constrictions. We mapped the flow patterns around bumps in topography and over small sills as well as the turbulence response to those features. We are trying to capture as complete a picture as possible of the slightly denser fluids flowing under lighter fluids, causing mixing, and generating measurable responses in the flow. What we saw is a combination of internal waves that are generated by the flow and turbulence that is forced by the flow.

One of the challenges in this experiment is to take this basin scale property contrast and focus it down to a small region, about 200 km square. These flows are forced through small channels 20–50 km wide and we are also looking at responses to topographic features that are perhaps only 1–2 km in size.

Wave Chasers in the Media

First siting of deep lee waves: Kaena RIdge, Hawaii

EOS, Trans. Am. Geophys. Union, JoAnna Wendel

Previous studies with remote observations and numerical models have predicted the existence of breaking deep internal lee waves driven by the tide, but until now, none have been observed directly.

22 Apr 2014

Scientists say a deep canyon feeds Puget Sound

King5 News (Seattle), Gary Chittim

University of Washington researchers said they are astounded by the volume of deep sea water that is flowing through an underwater canyon at the mouth of the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

14 Apr 2014

Samoan Passage cruise on the R/V Thompson

UW News and Information, Hannah Hickey

Oceanographers from the University of Washington's Applied Physics Laboratory are in Samoa for six weeks, the third and final trip studying skyscraper-sized waves that break in a narrow channel in the South Pacific Ocean.

27 Jan 2014

Breaking Underwater Waves Cause Mixing in Deep Ocean

NBC News, Charles Q. Choi

The chaos from skyscraper-tall waves breaking deep underwater has been captured for the first time, researchers say. Turbulence from these waves can generate thousands of times more mixing in the deep ocean than previously thought and, in turn, potentially require a critical rethinking of global models of climate and the oceans, the scientists who got a look at the phenomenon added.

17 Sep 2013

Dot Earth: Deep-ocean waves

The New York Times, Andrew Revkin

Scientists at the University of Washington have found skyscraper-height waves in deep ocean layers in the South Pacific — in some cases breaking in slow motion like surf on a beach. The finding sheds light on processes that allow heat in shallower ocean waters to mix with abyssal currents.

11 Sep 2013

Breaking deep-sea waves reveal mechanism for global ocean mixing

UW News & Information, Hannah Hickey

A University of Washington study for the first time recorded wave breaking in a key bottleneck for circulation in the world%u2019s largest ocean — the Samoan Passage, a narrow channel in the South Pacific Ocean that funnels water flowing from Antarctica.

9 Sep 2013

Tracking skyscraper-high waves across the globe

OceanCurrents Magazine

Internal-wave-driven mixing turns out to be a vital aspect of the ocean's circulation. We currently believe that without breaking internal waves, the deep sea would be a stagnant, homogenous deep pool of cold water with a very thin warm layer atop it. Since we instead observe a much more gradual decrease in temperature, we conclude that there is mixing in the abyss and that breaking internal waves lead to much of it. Therefore, internal wave mixing is part of the "bloodstream" of the ocean, enabling the upward part of the "conveyor belt" circulation by moving cold water upward. And that means that our predictions of climate change have significant uncertainty because we do not fully understand the sources, travel pathways and eventual breaking locations of the internal waves in the sea.

14 Apr 2013

Wavechasers condemn gummy bears to crushing ocean depths

UW Today, Sandra Hines

Follow the serious science - and the development of novel "Will it crush?" segments inspired by the YouTube hit "Will it blend?" - as University of Washington Wavechasers work in the South Pacific near Samoa. The expedition Oct. 24 to Nov. 5 is led by the UW Applied Physics Laboratory's Matthew Alford, with scientists trying to learn more about waves as tall as skyscrapers that roll along unseen thousands of feet below the ocean surface.

2 Nov 2011

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