scholarly journals North Atlantic Barotropic Vorticity Balances in Numerical Models

2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 289-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Schoonover ◽  
William Dewar ◽  
Nicolas Wienders ◽  
Jonathan Gula ◽  
James C. McWilliams ◽  
...  

AbstractNumerical simulations are conducted across model platforms and resolutions with a focus on the North Atlantic. Barotropic vorticity diagnostics confirm that the subtropical gyre is characterized by an inviscid balance primarily between the applied wind stress curl and bottom pressure torque. In an area-integrated budget over the Gulf Stream, the northward return flow is balanced by bottom pressure torque. These integrated budgets are shown to be consistent across model platforms and resolution, suggesting that these balances are robust. Two of the simulations, at 100- and 10-km resolutions, produce a more northerly separating Gulf Stream but obtain the correct integrated vorticity balances. In these simulations, viscous torque is nonnegligible on smaller scales, indicating that the separation is linked to the details of the local dynamics. These results are shown to be consistent with a scale analysis argument that suggests that the biharmonic viscous torque in particular is upsetting the inviscid balance in simulations with a more northerly separation. In addition to providing evidence for locally controlled inviscid separation, these results provide motivation to revisit the formulation of subgrid-scale parameterizations in general circulation models.

2006 ◽  
Vol 36 (11) ◽  
pp. 2119-2135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaëlle de Coëtlogon ◽  
Claude Frankignoul ◽  
Mats Bentsen ◽  
Claire Delon ◽  
Helmuth Haak ◽  
...  

Abstract Five non-eddy-resolving oceanic general circulation models driven by atmospheric fluxes derived from the NCEP reanalysis are used to investigate the link between the Gulf Stream (GS) variability, the atmospheric circulation, and the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). Despite the limited model resolution, the temperature at the 200-m depth along the mean GS axis behaves similarly in most models to that observed, and it is also well correlated with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), indicating that a northward (southward) GS shift lags a positive (negative) NAO phase by 0–2 yr. The northward shift is accompanied by an increase in the GS transport, and conversely the southward shift with a decrease in the GS transport. Two dominant time scales appear in the response of the GS transport to the NAO forcing: a fast time scale (less than 1 month) for the barotropic component, and a slower one (about 2 yr) for the baroclinic component. In addition, the two components are weakly coupled. The GS response seems broadly consistent with a linear adjustment to the changes in the wind stress curl, and evidence for baroclinic Rossby wave propagation is found in the southern part of the subtropical gyre. However, the GS shifts are also affected by basin-scale changes in the oceanic conditions, and they are well correlated in most models with the changes in the AMOC. A larger AMOC is found when the GS is stronger and displaced northward, and a higher correlation is found when the observed changes of the GS position are used in the comparison. The relation between the GS and the AMOC could be explained by the inherent coupling between the thermohaline and the wind-driven circulation, or by the NAO variability driving them on similar time scales in the models.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathieu Le Corre ◽  
Jonathan Gula ◽  
Anne-Marie Tréguier

Abstract. The circulation in the North Atlantic Subpolar gyre is complex and strongly influenced by the topography. The gyre dynamics is traditionally understood as the result of a topographic Sverdrup balance, which corresponds to a first order balance between the planetary vorticity advection, the bottom pressure torque and the wind stress curl. However, this dynamics has been studied mostly with non-eddy-resolving models and a crude representation of the bottom topography. Here we revisit the barotropic vorticity balance of the North Atlantic Subpolar gyre using a high resolution simulation (≈ 2-km) with topography-following vertical coordinates to better represent the mesoscale turbulence and flow-topography interactions. Our findings highlight that, locally, there is a first order balance between the bottom pressure torque and the nonlinear terms, albeit with a high degree of cancellation between each other. However, balances integrated over different regions of the gyre – shelf, slope and interior – still highlight the important role played by nonlinearities and the bottom drag curls. In particular the topographic Sverdrup balance cannot describe the dynamics in the interior of the gyre. The main sources of cyclonic vorticity are the nonlinear terms due to eddies generated along eastern boundary currents and the time-mean nonlinear terms from the Northwest Corner. Our results suggest that a good representation of the mesoscale activity along with a good positioning of the Northwest corner are two important conditions for a better representation of the circulation in the North Atlantic Subpolar Gyre.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Famooss Paolini ◽  
Alessio Bellucci ◽  
Paolo Ruggieri ◽  
Panos Athanasiadis ◽  
Silvio Gualdi

<p>Western boundary currents transport a large amount of heat from the Tropics toward higher latitudes; furthermore they are characterized by a strong sea surface temperature (SST) gradient, which anchors zones of intense upward motion extending up to the upper-troposphere and shapes zones of intense baroclinic eddy activity (storm tracks). For such reasons they have been shown to be fundamental in influencing the climate of the Northern Hemisphere and its variability, and a potentially relevant source of atmospheric predictability. </p><p> </p><p>General circulation models show deficiencies in simulating the observed atmospheric response to SST front variability. The atmospheric horizontal resolution has been recently proposed as a key element in understanding such differences. However, the number of studies on this subject is still limited. Furthermore, a multi-model analysis to systematically investigate differences between low-resolution and high-resolution atmospheric response to oceanic forcing is still lacking. </p><p> </p><p>The present work has the objective to fill this gap, analysing the atmospheric response to Gulf Stream SST front shifting using data from recent High Resolution Model Intercomparison Project (HighResMIP). This project was designed with the specific objective of investigating the impact of increased model horizontal resolution on the representation of the observed climate. Ensembles of historical simulations performed with three atmospheric general circulation models (AGCMs) have been analysed, each conducted with a low-resolution (LR, about 1°) and a high-resolution (HR, about 0.25°) configuration. AGCMs have been forced with observed SSTs (HadISST2 dataset), available at daily frequency on a 0.25° grid, during 1950–2014. </p><p><br>Results show atmospheric responses to the SST-induced diabatic heating anomalies that are strongly resolution dependent. In LR simulations a low-pressure anomaly is present downstream of the SST anomaly, while the diabatic heating anomaly is mainly balanced by meridional advection of air coming from higher latitudes, as expected for an extra-tropical shallow heat source. In contrast, HR simulations generate a high-pressure anomaly downstream of the SST anomaly, thus driving positive temperature advection from lower latitudes (not balancing diabatic heating). Along the vertical direction, both in LR and HR simulation, the diabatic heating in the interior of the atmosphere is balanced by upward motion south of GS SST front and downward motion north and further south of the Gulf Stream. Finally, LR simulations show a reduction in storm-track activity over the North Atlantic, whereas HR simulations show a meridional displacement of the storm-track considerably larger (yet in the same direction) than that of the SST front. HR simulations reproduce the atmospheric response obtained from observations, albeit weaker. This is a hint for the existence of a positive feedback between ocean and atmosphere, as proposed in previous studies. These findings are qualitatively consistent with previous results in literature and, leveraging on recent coordinated modelling efforts, shed light on the effective role of atmospheric horizontal resolution in modelling the atmospheric response to extra-tropical oceanic forcing.</p>


Ocean Science ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 389-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Medhaug ◽  
T. Furevik

Abstract. Output from a total of 24 state-of-the-art Atmosphere-Ocean General Circulation Models is analyzed. The models were integrated with observed forcing for the period 1850–2000 as part of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Report. All models show enhanced variability at multi-decadal time scales in the North Atlantic sector similar to the observations, but with a large intermodel spread in amplitudes and frequencies for both the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). The models, in general, are able to reproduce the observed geographical patterns of warm and cold episodes, but not the phasing such as the early warming (1930s–1950s) and the following colder period (1960s–1980s). This indicates that the observed 20th century extreme in temperatures are due to primarily a fortuitous phasing of intrinsic climate variability and not dominated by external forcing. Most models show a realistic structure in the overturning circulation, where more than half of the available models have a mean overturning transport within the observed estimated range of 13–24 Sverdrup. Associated with a stronger than normal AMOC, the surface temperature is increased and the sea ice extent slightly reduced in the North Atlantic. Individual models show potential for decadal prediction based on the relationship between the AMO and AMOC, but the models strongly disagree both in phasing and strength of the covariability. This makes it difficult to identify common mechanisms and to assess the applicability for predictions.


2006 ◽  
Vol 19 (21) ◽  
pp. 5637-5651 ◽  
Author(s):  
Willem P. Sijp ◽  
Michael Bates ◽  
Matthew H. England

Abstract Convective overturning arising from static instability during winter is thought to play a crucial role in the formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW). In ocean general circulation models (OGCMs), a strong reduction in convective penetration depth arises when horizontal diffusion (HD) is replaced by Gent and McWilliams (GM) mixing to model the effect of mesoscale eddies on tracer advection. In areas of sinking, the role of vertical tracer transport due to convection is largely replaced by the vertical component of isopycnal diffusion along sloping isopycnals. Here, the effect of this change in tracer transport physics on the stability of NADW formation under freshwater (FW) perturbations of the North Atlantic (NA) in a coupled model is examined. It is found that there is a significantly increased stability of NADW to FW input when GM is used in spite of GM experiments exhibiting consistently weaker NADW formation rates in unperturbed steady states. It is also found that there is a significant increase in NADW stability upon the introduction of isopycnal diffusion in the absence of GM. This indicates that isopycnal diffusion of tracer rather than isopycnal thickness diffusion is responsible for the increased NADW stability observed in the GM run. This result is robust with respect to the choice of isopycnal diffusion coefficient. Also, the NADW behavior in the isopycnal run, which includes a fixed background horizontal diffusivity, demonstrates that HD is not responsible in itself for reducing NADW stability when simple horizontal diffusion is used. Our results suggest that care should be taken when interpreting the results of coarse grid models with regard to NADW sensitivity to FW anomalies, regardless of the choice of mixing scheme.


2004 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 6823-6836 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Luo

Abstract. Long-term and large-scale correlations between Advanced Very High-Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) aerosol optical depth and International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) monthly cloud amount data show significant regional scale relationships between cloud amount and aerosols, consistent with aerosol-cloud interactions. Positive correlations between aerosols and cloud amount are associated with North American and Asian aerosols in the North Atlantic and Pacific storm tracks, and mineral aerosols in the tropical North Atlantic. Negative correlations are seen near biomass burning regions of North Africa and Indonesia, as well as south of the main mineral aerosol source of North Africa. These results suggest that there are relationships between aerosols and clouds in the observations that can be used by general circulation models to verify the correct forcing mechanisms for both direct and indirect radiative forcing by clouds.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrike Niemeier ◽  
Jadwiga H. Richter ◽  
Simone Tilmes

Abstract. Artificial injections of sulfur dioxide (SO2) into the stratosphere show in several model studies an impact on stratospheric dynamics. The quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) has been shown to slow down or even vanish, under higher SO2 injections in the equatorial region. But the impact is only qualitatively, but not quantitatively consistent across the different studies using different numerical models. The aim of this study is to understand the reasons behind the differences in the QBO response to SO2 injections between two general circulation models, the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM-110L) and MAECHAM5-HAM. We show that the response of the QBO to injections with the same SO2 injection rate is very different in the two models, but similar when a similar stratospheric heating rate is induced by SO2 injections of different amounts. The reason for the different response of the QBO corresponding to the same injection rate is very different vertical advection in the two models, even in the control simulation. The stronger vertical advection in WACCM results in a higher aerosol burden and stronger heating of the aerosols, and, consequently in a vanishing QBO at lower injection rate than in simulations with MAECHAM5-HAM.


Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natacha Gribenski ◽  
Pierre G. Valla ◽  
Frank Preusser ◽  
Thibault Roattino ◽  
Christian Crouzet ◽  
...  

Paleoglacier reconstructions in the northern and southern forelands of the European Alps indicate a synchronous Late Pleistocene glacial maximum during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 2, in phase with global ice volume records. However, strong controversy remains for the western foreland, where scarce and indirect dating as well as modeling studies suggest glacial maxima out of phase with the rest of the Alps. New luminescence dating brings the first direct Late Pleistocene glacial chronology for the western Alpine foreland and reveals two major glacier advances of similar maximum extent, at ca. 75–60 and ca. 40–30 ka, coinciding with MIS 4 and late MIS 3. We propose that asynchrony in glacial maxima between the western and the northern and southern Alpine forelands results from a progressive spatial reorganization of the atmospheric circulation over the North Atlantic in response to Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet fluctuations. While such a feedback mechanism has emerged from general circulation models, our Late Pleistocene paleoglacial reconstruction permits tracking of the spatiotemporal evolution of moisture advection patterns over Western Europe.


1996 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 246-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Seidov ◽  
Ralf Prien

Abstract. Paleoreconstructions suggest that during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) the North Atlantic circulation was noticeably different from its present state. However, the glacial salt conveyor belt is believed to be similar to the present-day's conveyor, albeit weaker and shallower because of an increased freshwater flux in high-latitudes. We present here the investigation of the conveyor operation based on ocean circulation modelling using two numerical models in parallel. The GFDL primitive equation model and a planetary geostrophic model are employed to address the problem of the paleocirculation modelling in cases of uncertain and sparse data comprising the glacial surface boundary conditions. The role of different simplifications that may be used in the ocean climate studies, including the role of grid resolution, bottom topography, coast-line, etc., versus glacial-interglacial changes of the ocean surface climatology is considered. The LGM reverse conveyor gyre appeared to be the most noticeable feature of the glacial-to-interglacial alteration of the ocean circulation. The reversed upper-ocean conveyor, weaker and subducting 'normal' conveyor in the intermediate depths, and the change of the deep-ocean return flow route are robust signatures of the glacial North Atlantic climate. The results are found to be 'model-independent' and fairly insensitive to all factors other than the onset of the glacial surface conditions.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roman Procyk ◽  
Shaun Lovejoy ◽  
Lenin Del Rio Amador

<p>The conventional energy balance equation (EBE) is a first order linear differential equation driven by solar, volcanic and anthropogenic forcings.  The differential term accounts for energy storage usually modelled as one or two “boxes”.  Each box obeys Newton’s law of cooling, so that when perturbed, the Earth’s temperature relaxes exponentially to a thermodynamic equilibrium.</p><p>However, the spatial scaling obeyed by the atmosphere and its numerical models implies that the energy storage process is a scaling, power law process, a consequence largely of turbulent, hierarchically organized oceans currents but also hierarchies of land ice, soil moisture and other processes whose rates depend on size.</p><p>Scaling storage leads to power law relaxation and can be modelled via a seemingly trivial change - from integer to fractional order derivatives - the Fractional EBE (FEBE): with temperature derivatives order 0 < H  < 1 rather than the EBE value H = 1.  Mathematically the FEBE is a past value problem, not an initial value problem.    Recent support for the FEBE comes from [Lovejoy, 2019a] who shows that the special H = 1/2 case (close to observations), the “Half-order EBE” (HEBE), can be analytically obtained from classical Budyko-Sellers energy balance models by improving the boundary conditions.</p><p>The FEBE simultaneously models the deterministic forced response to external (e.g. anthropogenic) forcing as well as the stochastic response to internal forcing (variability) [Lovejoy, 2019b].  We directly exploit both aspects to make projections based on historical data estimating the parameters using Bayesian inference.  Using global instrumental temperature series, alongside CMIP5 and CMIP6 standard forcings, the basic FEBE parameters are H ≈ 0.4 with a relaxation time ≈ 4 years.  </p><p>This observation-based model also produces projections for the coming century with forcings prescribed by the CMIP5 Representative Concentration Pathways scenarios and the CMIP6 Shared Socioeconomic Pathways.</p><p>We compare both generations of General Circulation Models (GCMs) outputs from CMIP5/6 alongside with the projections produced by the FEBE model which are entirely independent from GCMs, contributing to our understanding of forced climate variability in the past, present and future.  When comparing to CMIP5 projections, we find that the mean projections are about 10- 15% lower while the uncertainties are roughly half as large.  Our global temperature projections are therefore within the  CMIP5 90% confidence limits and thus give them strong, independent support.</p><p> </p><p><strong>References</strong></p><p>Lovejoy, S., The half-order energy balance equation, J. Geophys. Res. (Atmos.), (submitted, Nov. 2019), 2019a.</p><p>Lovejoy, S., Fractional Relaxation noises, motions and the stochastic fractional relxation equation Nonlinear Proc. in Geophys. Disc., https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2019-39, 2019b.</p>


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