scholarly journals Effects of Variability in Atlantic Ocean Circulation

Eos ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Zhang ◽  
Rowan Sutton ◽  
Gokhan Danabasoglu ◽  
Young-Oh Kwon ◽  
Robert Marsh ◽  
...  

There is strong evidence that the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation plays an essential role in Atlantic multidecadal variability and associated climate impacts.

Eos ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack Lee

Simulations reveal the influence of reduced and enhanced wind stress on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (26) ◽  
pp. eaaz4876 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Liu ◽  
Alexey V. Fedorov ◽  
Shang-Ping Xie ◽  
Shineng Hu

While the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is projected to slow down under anthropogenic warming, the exact role of the AMOC in future climate change has not been fully quantified. Here, we present a method to stabilize the AMOC intensity in anthropogenic warming experiments by removing fresh water from the subpolar North Atlantic. This method enables us to isolate the AMOC climatic impacts in experiments with a full-physics climate model. Our results show that a weakened AMOC can explain ocean cooling south of Greenland that resembles the North Atlantic warming hole and a reduced Arctic sea ice loss in all seasons with a delay of about 6 years in the emergence of an ice-free Arctic in boreal summer. In the troposphere, a weakened AMOC causes an anomalous cooling band stretching from the lower levels in high latitudes to the upper levels in the tropics and displaces the Northern Hemisphere midlatitude jets poleward.


2007 ◽  
Vol 20 (19) ◽  
pp. 4940-4956 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uta Krebs ◽  
A. Timmermann

Abstract Using a coupled ocean–sea ice–atmosphere model of intermediate complexity, the authors study the influence of air–sea interactions on the stability of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). Mimicking glacial Heinrich events, a complete shutdown of the AMOC is triggered by the delivery of anomalous freshwater forcing to the northern North Atlantic. Analysis of fully and partially coupled freshwater perturbation experiments under glacial conditions shows that associated changes of the heat transport in the North Atlantic lead to a cooling north of the thermal equator and an associated strengthening of the northeasterly trade winds. Because of advection of cold air and an intensification of the trade winds, the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) is shifted southward. Changes of the accumulated precipitation lead to the generation of a positive salinity anomaly in the northern tropical Atlantic and a negative anomaly in the southern tropical Atlantic. During the shutdown phase of the AMOC, cross-equatorial oceanic surface flow is halted, preventing dilution of the positive salinity anomaly in the North Atlantic. Advected northward by the wind-driven ocean circulation, the positive salinity anomaly increases the upper-ocean density in the deep-water formation regions, thereby accelerating the recovery of the AMOC considerably. Partially coupled experiments that neglect tropical air–sea coupling reveal that the recovery time of the AMOC is almost twice as long as in the fully coupled case. The impact of a shutdown of the AMOC on the Indian and Pacific Oceans can be decomposed into atmospheric and oceanic contributions. Temperature anomalies in the Northern Hemisphere are largely controlled by atmospheric circulation anomalies, whereas those in the Southern Hemisphere are strongly determined by ocean dynamical changes and exhibit a time lag of several decades. An intensification of the Pacific meridional overturning cell in the northern North Pacific during the AMOC shutdown can be explained in terms of wind-driven ocean circulation changes acting in concert with global ocean adjustment processes.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brady Ferster ◽  
Alexey Fedorov ◽  
Juliette Mignot ◽  
Eric Guilyardi

<p>The Arctic and North Atlantic Ocean play a fundamental role in Earth’s water cycle, distribution of energy (i.e. heat), and the formation of cold, dense waters. Through the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), heat is transported to the high-latitudes. Classically, the climate impact of AMOC variations has been investigated through hosing experiments, where anomalous freshwater is artificially added or removed from the North Atlantic to modulate deep water formation. However, such a protocol introduces artificial changes in the subpolar area, possibly masking the effect of the AMOC modulation. Here, we develope a protocol where AMOC intensity is modulated remotely through the teleconnection of the tropical Indian Ocean (TIO), so as to investigate more robustly the impact of the AMOC on climate. Warming in the TIO has recently been shown to strengthen the Walker circulation in the Atlantic through the propagation of Kelvin and Rossby waves, increasing and stabilizing the AMOC on longer timescales. Using the latest coupled-model from Insitut Pierre Simon Laplace (IPSL-CM6), we have designed a three-member ensemble experiment nudging the surface temperatures of the TIO by -2°C, +1°C, and +2°C for 100 years. The objectives are to better quantify the timescales of AMOC variability outside the use of hosing experiments and the TIO-AMOC relationship.  In each ensemble member, there are two distinct features compared to the control run. The initial changes in AMOC (≤20 years) are largely atmospherically driven, while on longer timescales is largely driven by the TIO teleconnection to the tropical Atlantic. In the northern North Atlantic, changes in sensible heat fluxes range from 15 to 20 W m<sup>-2 </sup>in all three members compared to the control run, larger than the natural variability. On the longer timescales, AMOC variability is strongly influenced from anomalies in the tropical Atlantic Ocean. The TIO teleconnection supports decreased precipitation in the tropical Atlantic Ocean during warming (opposite during TIO cooling) events, as well as positive salinity anomalies and negative temperature anomalies. Using lagged correlations, there are the strongest correlations on scales within one year and a delayed response of 30 years (in the -2°C ensembles). In comparing the last 20 years, nudging the TIO induces a 3.3 Sv response per 1°C change. In summary, we have designed an experiment to investigate the AMOC variability without directly changing the North Atlantic through hosing, making way for a more unbiased approach to analysing the AMOC variability in climate models.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 26 (18) ◽  
pp. 7167-7186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Wunsch ◽  
Patrick Heimbach

Abstract The zonally integrated meridional volume transport in the North Atlantic [Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC)] is described in a 19-yr-long ocean-state estimate, one consistent with a diverse global dataset. Apart from a weak increasing trend at high northern latitudes, the AMOC appears statistically stable over the last 19 yr with fluctuations indistinguishable from those of a stationary Gaussian stochastic process. This characterization makes it possible to study (using highly developed tools) extreme values, predictability, and the statistical significance of apparent trends. Gaussian behavior is consistent with the central limit theorem for a process arising from numerous independent disturbances. In this case, generators include internal instabilities, changes in wind and buoyancy forcing fields, boundary waves, the Gulf Stream and deep western boundary current transports, the interior fraction in Sverdrup balance, and all similar phenomena arriving as summation effects from long distances and times. As a zonal integral through the sum of the large variety of physical processes in the three-dimensional ocean circulation, understanding of the AMOC, if it is of central climate importance, requires breaking it down into its unintegrated components over the entire basin.


Eos ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Pratt

Water masses formed off southeastern Greenland may contribute more than previously thought to the variability of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, which strongly influences global climate.


Ocean Science ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Lohmann ◽  
J. H. Jungclaus ◽  
D. Matei ◽  
J. Mignot ◽  
M. Menary ◽  
...  

Abstract. We investigate the respective role of variations in subpolar deep water formation and Nordic Seas overflows for the decadal to multidecadal variability of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). This is partly done by analysing long (order of 1000 years) control simulations with five coupled climate models. For all models, the maximum influence of variations in subpolar deep water formation is found at about 45° N, while the maximum influence of variations in Nordic Seas overflows is rather found at 55 to 60° N. Regarding the two overflow branches, the influence of variations in the Denmark Strait overflow is, for all models, substantially larger than that of variations in the overflow across the Iceland–Scotland Ridge. The latter might, however, be underestimated, as the models in general do not realistically simulate the flow path of the Iceland–Scotland overflow water south of the Iceland–Scotland Ridge. The influence of variations in subpolar deep water formation is, on multimodel average, larger than that of variations in the Denmark Strait overflow. This is true both at 45° N, where the maximum standard deviation of decadal to multidecadal AMOC variability is located for all but one model, and at the more classical latitude of 30° N. At 30° N, variations in subpolar deep water formation and Denmark Strait overflow explain, on multimodel average, about half and one-third respectively of the decadal to multidecadal AMOC variance. Apart from analysing multimodel control simulations, we have performed sensitivity experiments with one of the models, in which we suppress the variability of either subpolar deep water formation or Nordic Seas overflows. The sensitivity experiments indicate that variations in subpolar deep water formation and Nordic Seas overflows are not completely independent. We further conclude from these experiments that the decadal to multidecadal AMOC variability north of about 50° N is mainly related to variations in Nordic Seas overflows. At 45° N and south of this latitude, variations in both subpolar deep water formation and Nordic Seas overflows contribute to the AMOC variability, with neither of the processes being very dominant compared to the other.


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