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  • If you've ever floated on an ocean swell,

  • you'll know that the sea moves constantly.

  • Zoom out, and you'll see the larger picture:

  • our Earth, covered by 71 percent water,

  • moving in one enormous current around the planet.

  • This intimidating global conveyor belt

  • has many complicated drivers,

  • but behind it all is a simple pump

  • that moves water all over the earth.

  • The process is called thermohaline circulation,

  • and it's driven by a basic concept:

  • the concentration gradient.

  • Let's leave the ocean for one moment

  • and imagine we're in an empty room

  • with lots of Roombas sardined together

  • in one corner.

  • Turn them all on at once

  • and the machines glide outwards

  • bumping into and away from each other

  • until the room is filled with an evenly spaced distribution.

  • The machines have moved randomly

  • towards equilibrium,

  • a place where the concentration of a substance

  • is equally spread out.

  • That's what happens along a concentration gradient,

  • as substances shift passively from a high,

  • or squashed, concentration,

  • to a lower, more comfortable one.

  • How does this relate to ocean currents and thermohaline circulation?

  • Thermo means temperature,

  • and haline means salt

  • because in the real world scenario of the sea,

  • temperature and salinity drive the shift

  • from high to low concentrations.

  • Let's put you back in the ocean

  • to see how this works.

  • Snap!

  • You're transformed into a molecule of surface water,

  • off the temperate coast of New York

  • surrounded by a zillion rowdy others.

  • Here, the sun's rays act as an energizer

  • that set you and the other water molecules

  • jostling about, bouncing off each other

  • like the Roombas did.

  • The more you spread out,

  • the less concentrated the water molecules

  • at the surface become.

  • Through this passive motion,

  • you move from a high to a lower concentration.

  • Let's suspend the laws of physics for a moment,

  • and pretend that your molecular self

  • can plunge deep down into the water column.

  • In these colder depths,

  • the comparative lack of solar warmth

  • makes water molecules sluggish,

  • meaning they can sit quite still at high concentrations.

  • No jostling here.

  • But seeking relief

  • from the cramped conditions they're in,

  • they soon start moving upwards

  • towards the roomier situation at the surface.

  • This is how temperature

  • drives a shift of water molecules

  • from high to low concentrations,

  • towards equilibrium.

  • But sea water is made up of more than just H2O.

  • There are a great deal of salt ions in it as well.

  • And like you, these guys have a similar desire

  • for spacious real estate.

  • As the sun warms the sea,

  • some of your fellow water molecules

  • evaporate from the surface,

  • increasing the ration of salt to H2O.

  • The crowded salt ions left behind

  • notice that lower down,

  • salt molecules seem to be enjoying more space.

  • And so an invasion begins,

  • as they too move downwards in the water column.

  • In the polar regions,

  • we see how this small local process

  • effects global movement.

  • In the arctic and antarctic,

  • where ice slabs decorate the water's surface,

  • there's little temperature difference

  • between surface and deeper waters.

  • It's all pretty cold.

  • But salinity differs,

  • and in this scenario,

  • that's what triggers the action.

  • Here, the sun's rays melt surface ice,

  • depositing a new load of water molecules

  • into the sea.

  • That not only increases the proximity

  • between you and other water molecules,

  • leaving you vying for space again,

  • but it also conversely dilutes

  • the concentration of salt ions.

  • So, down you go,

  • riding along the concentration gradient

  • towards more comfortable conditions.

  • For salt ions, however,

  • their lower concentration at the surface,

  • acts like an advertisement

  • to the clamoring masses of salt molecules below

  • who begin their assent.

  • In both temperate and polar regions,

  • this passive motion along a concentration gradient,

  • can get a current going.

  • And that is the starting point

  • of the global conveyor

  • called thermohaline circulation.

  • This is how a simple concept

  • becomes the mechanism underlying

  • one of the largest

  • and most important systems on our planet.

  • And if you look around,

  • you'll see it happening everywhere.

  • Turn on a light, and it's there.

  • Concentration gradients govern

  • the flow of electricity,

  • allowing electrons squashed together in one space

  • to travel to an area of lower concentration

  • when a channel is opened,

  • which you do by flipping a switch.

  • Right now, in fact, there's some gradient action going on

  • inside you as you breath air into your lungs

  • letting the concentrated oxygen in that air

  • move passively out of your lungs

  • and into your blood stream.

  • We know that the world is filled

  • with complex physical problems,

  • but sometimes the first step

  • towards understanding them can be simple.

  • So when you confront the magnitude

  • of the ocean's currents,

  • or have to figure out how electricity works,

  • remember not to panic.

  • Understanding can be as simple as flipping a switch.

If you've ever floated on an ocean swell,

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B2 中高級

【TED-Ed】海洋的運動。濃度梯度的作用--Sasha Wright。 (【TED-Ed】The motion of the ocean: The role of the concentration gradient - Sasha Wright)

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    Sofi 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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