Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Decomposing the time-mean Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and its variability with latitude.

View through CrossRef
<p>The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulations (AMOC) is crucial to our global climate, transporting heat and nutrients around the globe. Detecting  potential climate change signals first requires a careful characterisation of inherent natural AMOC variability. Using a hierarchy of global coupled model  control runs (HadGEM-GC3.1, HighResMIP) we decompose the overturning circulation as the sum of (near surface) Ekman, (depth-dependent) bottom velocity, eastern and western boundary density components, as a function of latitude. This decomposition proves a useful low-dimensional characterisation of the full 3-D overturning circulation. In particular, the decomposition provides a means to investigate and quantify the constraints which boundary information imposes on the overturning, and the relative role of eastern versus western contributions on different timescales. </p><p>The basin-wide time-mean contribution of each boundary component to the expected streamfunction is investigated as a function of depth, latitude and spatial resolution. Regression modelling supplemented by Correlation Adjusted coRrelation (CAR) score diagnostics provide a natural ranking of the contributions of the various components in explaining the variability of the total streamfunction. Results reveal the dominant role of the bottom component, western boundary and Ekman components at short time-scales, and of boundary density components at decadal and longer timescales.</p>
Title: Decomposing the time-mean Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and its variability with latitude.
Description:
<p>The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulations (AMOC) is crucial to our global climate, transporting heat and nutrients around the globe.
Detecting  potential climate change signals first requires a careful characterisation of inherent natural AMOC variability.
Using a hierarchy of global coupled model  control runs (HadGEM-GC3.
1, HighResMIP) we decompose the overturning circulation as the sum of (near surface) Ekman, (depth-dependent) bottom velocity, eastern and western boundary density components, as a function of latitude.
This decomposition proves a useful low-dimensional characterisation of the full 3-D overturning circulation.
In particular, the decomposition provides a means to investigate and quantify the constraints which boundary information imposes on the overturning, and the relative role of eastern versus western contributions on different timescales.
 </p><p>The basin-wide time-mean contribution of each boundary component to the expected streamfunction is investigated as a function of depth, latitude and spatial resolution.
Regression modelling supplemented by Correlation Adjusted coRrelation (CAR) score diagnostics provide a natural ranking of the contributions of the various components in explaining the variability of the total streamfunction.
Results reveal the dominant role of the bottom component, western boundary and Ekman components at short time-scales, and of boundary density components at decadal and longer timescales.
</p>.

Related Results

Atmospheric pCO2 sensitivity to the biological pump in the ocean
Atmospheric pCO2 sensitivity to the biological pump in the ocean
In models of the global carbon cycle, the pCO2of the atmosphere is more sensitive to the chemistry of the high‐latitude surface ocean than the tropical ocean. Because sea‐surface n...
Past and future of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation under radiative and meltwater forcings
Past and future of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation under radiative and meltwater forcings
Past trends in the strength of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) are still debated, and its fate under global warming is uncertain. Observational studies sugge...
Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change
Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change
Abstract. As the planet warms due to the accumulation of anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere, the interaction of surface ocean carbonate chemistry and the radiative forcing of atmo...
Changing Atlantic Freshwater Transports in Response to Future Climate Projections
Changing Atlantic Freshwater Transports in Response to Future Climate Projections
Changes in Atlantic meridional freshwater transports have been hypothesized to play an important role in Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) stability, redistributin...
Meridional overturning circulation in the South Atlantic at the last glacial maximum
Meridional overturning circulation in the South Atlantic at the last glacial maximum
The geostrophic shear associated with the meridional overturning circulation is reflected in the difference in density between the eastern and western margins of the ocean basin. H...
Interannual to decadal variability in subtropical circulation transport in the south Indian Ocean
Interannual to decadal variability in subtropical circulation transport in the south Indian Ocean
<p><span>This study estimates variability in meridional velocity and transport of the subtropical circulation in the south Indian Ocean using in-situ hy...
Interannual Variability of the Mass-Weighted Isentropic Zonal Mean Meridional Circulation in the Northern Hemisphere Winter
Interannual Variability of the Mass-Weighted Isentropic Zonal Mean Meridional Circulation in the Northern Hemisphere Winter
Abstract The atmospheric general circulation diagnosed by the mass-weighted isentropic zonal mean exhibits an extratropical direct (ETD) circulation driven by eddy momentum transpo...
The Atlantic sibling: a reconciling vision on the nature of El Niño’s “little brother” 
The Atlantic sibling: a reconciling vision on the nature of El Niño’s “little brother” 
The Atlantic Niño, also referred to as Atlantic zonal mode, equatorial Atlantic mode or, sometimes, El Niño’s little brother, is an important source of ...

Back to Top