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17.6: CC6 Salinity, Temperature, Pressure, and Water Density

  • Page ID
    51557

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    Essential to Know

    Understanding the Concept

    Below the ocean surface layers, movements of water masses are caused predominantly by differences in density between water masses (CC1, CC3). For this reason, water density, which depends on temperature, the concentration of dissolved salts, and pressure, is among the most important properties of seawater.

    Increasing pressure compresses liquids, squeezing more mass into a smaller volume. Thus, density increases with increasing pressure. However, the molecules of water can be forced together only slightly, even by large pressure increases. Water, unlike air, is therefore almost incompressible, and the effect of pressure on water density is small. The density of seawater is only about 2% greater at the deepest depths of the oceans than it is at the surface. Consequently, the effects of pressure on density are generally ignored because oceanographers are usually interested in density differences between water masses at or near the same depth.

    The density of water increases as salinity increases. This is because most ions have a higher density than water molecules do, and dissolved substances reduce the clustering of water molecules.

    Decreasing temperature generally causes liquids to contract. Therefore, decreasing temperature generally increases density. However, the behavior of pure water is an exception to this rule. Between its boiling point and 4°C, water behaves normally: density increases as temperature decreases. However, between about 4°C and its freezing point, pure water decreases slightly in density as the temperature decreases. In other words, water density has a maximum at about 4°C (Chap. 5).

    As salinity increases, the temperature at which the density maximum occurs decreases. At salinities of 24.7 and higher, the water density maximum is at the freezing point. The salinity of open-ocean waters is generally above 24.7. Therefore, in contrast to pure water and water with salinity less than 24.7, open-ocean seawater increases in density as temperature decreases at all temperatures above its freezing point.

    The relationships among seawater density and pressure, temperature, and salinity are complex and are discussed in more detail in Chapter 5 and Figure CC6-1. However, they are illustrated by the following summary:

    Table CC6-1. Density increase with salinity and temperature

    Salinity

    Temperature (°C)

    Density Increase per 1°C Reduction

    0

    1

    –0.00007a

    0

    10

    0.00009

    0

    20

    0.00021

    0

    30

    0.0003

    20

    1

    0.00001

    20

    10

    0.00014

    20

    20

    0.00024

    20

    30

    0.00033

    40

    1

    0.00017

    40

    10

    0.00018

    40

    20

    0.00027

    40

    30

    0.00034

    aThe density of pure water decreases with decreasing temperature below 4°C.

    Water density graph of temperature versus salinity with lines of equal density
    Figure CC6-1. The relationships among salinity, temperature, and density are complex. Generally, density increases as temperature decreases or as salinity increases. This figure is reproduced with additional information in Chapter 5 (Fig. 5-13a).

    The relative importance of temperature and salinity in determining density varies with water temperature. In cold waters, variations in salinity are more important than variations in temperature. In warm waters, variations in temperature are more important.

    The density of seawater in the surface layer is altered continuously by solar heating, which changes temperature, and in turn evaporation, precipitation, and ice formation and melting, which alter salinity. These processes take place at the ocean surface. Vertical motions of water masses in the oceans are caused primarily by the sinking of high-density surface water formed by cooling or evaporation (increased salinity).

    The vertical motions resulting from changes in water density are discussed in CC3 and in Chapter 8.


    This page titled 17.6: CC6 Salinity, Temperature, Pressure, and Water Density is shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by .


    This page titled 17.6: CC6 Salinity, Temperature, Pressure, and Water Density is shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Douglas A. Segar.