How do ocean currents work? - Jennifer Verduin

2,714,237 views ・ 2019-01-31

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 1992,
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a cargo ship carrying bath toys got caught in a storm.
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Shipping containers washed overboard,
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and the waves swept 28,000 rubber ducks and other toys into the North Pacific.
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But they didn’t stick together.
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Quite the opposite–
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the ducks have since washed up all over the world,
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and researchers have used their paths
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to chart a better understanding of ocean currents.
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Ocean currents are driven by a range of sources:
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the wind, tides, changes in water density,
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and the rotation of the Earth.
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The topography of the ocean floor and the shoreline modifies those motions,
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causing currents to speed up,
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slow down, or change direction.
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Ocean currents fall into two main categories:
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surface currents and deep ocean currents.
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Surface currents control the motion
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of the top 10 percent of the ocean’s water,
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while deep-ocean currents mobilize the other 90 percent.
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Though they have different causes,
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surface and deep ocean currents influence each other
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in an intricate dance that keeps the entire ocean moving.
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Near the shore,
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surface currents are driven by both the wind and tides,
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which draw water back and forth as the water level falls and rises.
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Meanwhile, in the open ocean, wind is the major force behind surface currents.
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As wind blows over the ocean,
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it drags the top layers of water along with it.
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That moving water pulls on the layers underneath,
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and those pull on the ones beneath them.
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In fact, water as deep as 400 meters
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is still affected by the wind at the ocean’s surface.
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If you zoom out to look at the patterns of surface currents all over the earth,
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you’ll see that they form big loops called gyres,
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which travel clockwise in the northern hemisphere
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and counter-clockwise in the southern hemisphere.
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That’s because of the way the Earth’s rotation
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affects the wind patterns that give rise to these currents.
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If the earth didn’t rotate,
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air and water would simply move back and forth
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between low pressure at the equator
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and high pressure at the poles.
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But as the earth spins,
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air moving from the equator to the North Pole is deflected eastward,
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and air moving back down is deflected westward.
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The mirror image happens in the southern hemisphere,
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so that the major streams of wind
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form loop-like patterns around the ocean basins.
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This is called the Coriolis Effect.
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The winds push the ocean beneath them into the same rotating gyres.
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And because water holds onto heat more effectively than air,
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these currents help redistribute warmth around the globe.
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Unlike surface currents,
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deep ocean currents are driven primarily by changes in the density of seawater.
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As water moves towards the North Pole,
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it gets colder.
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It also has a higher concentration of salt,
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because the ice crystals that form trap water while leaving salt behind.
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This cold, salty water is more dense,
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so it sinks,
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and warmer surface water takes its place,
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setting up a vertical current called thermohaline circulation.
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Thermohaline circulation of deep water and wind-driven surface currents
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combine to form a winding loop called the Global Conveyor Belt.
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As water moves from the depths of the ocean to the surface,
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it carries nutrients that nourish the microorganisms
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which form the base of many ocean food chains.
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The global conveyor belt is the longest current in the world,
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snaking all around the globe.
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But it only moves a few centimeters per second.
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It could take a drop of water a thousand years to make the full trip.
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However, rising sea temperatures are causing the conveyor belt
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to seemingly slow down.
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Models show this causing havoc with weather systems
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on both sides of the Atlantic,
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and no one knows what would happen if it continues to slow
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or if it stopped altogether.
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The only way we’ll be able to forecast correctly and prepare accordingly
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will be to continue to study currents and the powerful forces that shape them.
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