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  2. Ocean temperature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_temperature

    The majority of ocean heat gain occurs in the Southern Ocean. For example, between the 1950s and the 1980s, the temperature of the Antarctic Southern Ocean rose by 0.17 °C (0.31 °F), nearly twice the rate of the global ocean. [38] The warming rate varies with depth. The upper ocean (above 700 m) is warming the fastest.

  3. TEOS-10 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TEOS-10

    It supersedes the former standard EOS-80 (Equation of State of Seawater 1980). [1] TEOS-10 is used by oceanographers and climate scientists to calculate and model properties of the oceans such as heat content in an internationally comparable way.

  4. Ocean heat content - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_heat_content

    The ocean heat content (OHC) has been increasing for decades as the ocean has been absorbing most of the excess heat resulting from greenhouse gas emissions from human activities. [1] The graph shows OHC calculated to a water depth of 700 and to 2000 meters. Ocean heat content (OHC) or ocean heat uptake (OHU) is the energy absorbed and stored ...

  5. Ocean stratification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_stratification

    The dependence on pressure is not significant, since seawater is almost perfectly incompressible. [3] A change in the temperature of the water impacts on the distance between water parcels directly. [clarification needed] When the temperature of the water increases, the distance between water parcels will increase and hence the density will ...

  6. Sea surface temperature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_surface_temperature

    The extent of the ocean surface down into the ocean is influenced by the amount of mixing that takes place between the surface water and the deeper water. This depends on the temperature: in the tropics the warm surface layer of about 100 m is quite stable and does not mix much with deeper water, while near the poles winter cooling and storms makes the surface layer denser and it mixes to ...

  7. Sea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea

    Deep seawater has a temperature between −2 °C (28 °F) and 5 °C (41 °F) in all parts of the globe. [30] Seawater with a typical salinity of 35 ‰ [31] has a freezing point of about −1.8 °C (28.8 °F). [32] When its temperature becomes low enough, ice crystals form on the surface.

  8. Conservative temperature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_temperature

    Conservative temperature is defined to be directly proportional to potential enthalpy. It is rescaled to have the same units as the in-situ temperature: = where = 3989.24495292815 J kg −1 K −1 is a reference value of the specific heat capacity, chosen to be as close as possible to the spatial average of the heat capacity over the entire ocean surface.

  9. Thermocline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermocline

    The thermal boundary between the troposphere (lower atmosphere) and the stratosphere (upper atmosphere) is a thermocline. Temperature generally decreases with altitude, but the heat from the day's exposure to sun is released at night, which can create a warm region at ground with colder air above.