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Examining the relationships between low-frequency upper ocean temperature and AMOC variability in ECCO v4 solutions Martha W. Buckley and Rui Ponte (AER)

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Presentation on theme: "Examining the relationships between low-frequency upper ocean temperature and AMOC variability in ECCO v4 solutions Martha W. Buckley and Rui Ponte (AER)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Examining the relationships between low-frequency upper ocean temperature and AMOC variability in ECCO v4 solutions Martha W. Buckley and Rui Ponte (AER) Thanks to the ECCO group, in particular Gael Forget and Patrick Heimbach

2 Low-frequency Atlantic SST variability Observations indicate Atlantic SSTs exhibit significant low-frequency variability (Bjerknes 1964; Kushnir 1994; Ting et al. 2009). Impacts of Atlantic SST variability include : –Temperature, precipitation over adjacent landmasses (Zhang and Delworth, 2006, 2007; Pohlman et al, 2006) –Changes in frequency/intensity of Atlantic hurricanes (Zhang and Delworth, 2006) However, the origin of SST anomalies is not understood. –Passive (local) response to atmospheric forcing (Seager, 2000). –Wind and/or buoyancy forced baroclinic Rossby waves (Sturges and Hong, 1995, 1998; Qiu 2002; Piecuch and Ponte, 2012). –Large scale changes in ocean heat transport due to changes in the AMOC (Kushnir 1994, etc.) and gyre circulations. –Lozier (2010): most significant question concerning the AMOC is role of AMOC in creating decadal SST anomalies.

3 Outline What is the relationship between interannual AMOC and upper-ocean heat content (UOHC) variability? I.ECCO version 4 state estimate A. Model details (G. Forget) B. Comparison to observations 1.Comparison of mean temperature to in-situ observations. 2.Comparison of SST variability to satellite SST observations. 3.Comparison of mean AMOC/OHT and AMOC and OHT variability to RAPID estimates. II.Interannual UOHC and AMOC variability A.UOHC variability in ECCO B.Associated AMOC variability C.Causality?

4 ECCO version 4 state estimate MITgcm least squares fit to observations, 1992-2010 For details, see G. Forget’s talk or Forget et al, in prep. new global grid LLC_90 –includes the Arctic –telescopic resolution to 1/3 o near the Equator –meridionally isotropic in mid-latitudes 50 vertical levels with partial cells forcing using ERA-Interim state-of-the-art dynamic/thermodynamic sea ice model nonlinear free surface + real freshwater flux B.C.s third-order advection scheme removal of C-D scheme for Coriolis terms use of diffusion operator (Weaver & Courtier, 2001) for in-situ obs. all satellite data are daily along-track internal model parameters are part of the control space

5 Comparison of ECCO & mean in-situ temperature G. Forget et al, in prep

6 Variability: comparison of ECCO & satellite SST SST variability: rms(modeled – observed) (G. Forget)

7 Realism of ECCO: AMOC and mean OHT Estimate of Atlantic OHT from ECMWF reanalysis: Trenberth and Caron (2001)

8 Realism of ECCO: comparison to RAPID Correlation 0.73 No systematic offset Correlation improves with time Correlation: 0.81 ECCO systematically underestimates OHT Note: Neither Florida current transport or RAPID AMOC transport estimates are used as constraints in ECCO

9 ECCO: Upper-ocean temperature (UOT) variability

10 UOT variability  AMOC variability AMOC variability UOT variability ?? Causality? AMOC  UOT OHT anomalies associated with AMOC variability lead to UOT variability UOT  AMOC UOT anomalies reach ocean boundaries and lead to AMOC variability UOT  AMOC UOT variability results in AMOC variability which feeds back onto UOT

11 Conclusions ECCO v4 estimate reasonably captures mean ocean state and large-scale ocean variability. –Atlantic OHT matches Trenberth & Carone (2001) well, although somewhat too low compared to direct ocean estimates. –Mean and variability of AMOC strength at 26 o N similar to RAPID –OHT variability at 26 o N captured; mean smaller than MOCHA estimate. ECCO exhibits low-frequency upper ocean temperature (UOT) variability: large anomalies over Gulf Stream path and in subpolar gyre. Large-scale AMOC variability associated with UOT variability. Causality of relationship to be determined. –UOHC budget analyses: role of air-sea heat fluxes, advection (separately consider Ekman transports, local response to winds).

12 Extra slides

13 Baroclinic pressure: modal decompostion Equations of motion linearized about a resting mean state, flat bottom Separation of variables  eigenvalue problem for vertical structure (Gill, 1982). Vertical structure for pressure: Solve for F(z) at each horizontal location using observed N(z). Modes = complete, orthonormal basis What portion of the variability is captured by 1 st baroclinic mode? Majority of baroclinic pressure variability in upper ocean is explained by 1 st baroclinic mode


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