This lecture is 53 minutes long and courtesy of NASA Climate Change and the JPL Center for Climate Sciences Seminars.
YouTube Description:
"The circulation of the Antarctic margins in a changing climate,” is presented by Dr. Andy Thompson, a physical oceanographer and Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering at Caltech.
Ocean circulation at the Antarctic margins is dominated by a system of circumpolar frontal currents that occupy the continental shelf and slope. This Antarctic Slope Frontal (ASF) system has a significant impact on global climate through its control over the transport of warm water towards Antarctica's floating ice shelves and over the properties of bottom waters exported from the Antarctic shelf. In the past two decades, appreciation of the spatial and temporal variability of the ASF and its impact on heat and tracer transport has grown through a combination of novel in situ observational techniques, remote sensing and high-resolution numerical modeling. This talk will highlight how these different approaches have improved our dynamical understanding of the ASF and its role in the global circulation and climate system.
This is a recording of a presentation organized by NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Center for Climate Sciences as part of its Distinguished Climate Lectures on February 7, 2018 in Pasadena, Calif. https://climatesciences.jpl.nasa.gov"