Global Thermohaline Circulation. Part I: Sensitivity to Atmospheric Moisture Transport

Joint Program Reprint • Journal Article
Global Thermohaline Circulation. Part I: Sensitivity to Atmospheric Moisture Transport
Wang, X., P.H. Stone and J. Marotzke (1999)
Journal of Climate, 12: 71-82

Reprint 1999-1 [Read Full Article]

Abstract/Summary:

A global ocean general circulation model of idealized geometry, combined with an atmospheric model based on observed transports of heat, momentum, and moisture, is used to explore the sensitivity of the global conveyor belt circulation to the surface freshwater fluxes, in particular the effects of meridional atmospheric moisture transports. The numerical results indicate that the equilibrium strength of the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) formation increases as the global freshwater transports increase. However, the global deep water formation, i.e., the sum of the NADW and the Southern Ocean Deep Water formation rates, is relatively insensitive to changes of the freshwater flux.
      Perturbations to the meridional moisture transports of each hemisphere identify equatorially asymmetric effects of the freshwater fluxes. The equilibrium NADW formation is primarily controlled by the magnitude of the Southern Hemisphere freshwater flux. The Northern Hemisphere freshwater flux only has a significant impact on the transient behavior of the North Atlantic overturning. Increasing this flux leads to a collapse of the conveyor belt circulation, but the collapse is delayed if the Southern Hemisphere flux also increases. The perturbation experiments also illustrate that the rapidity of collapse is affected by random fluctuations in the wind stress field.

© 1999 American Meteorological Society

Citation:

Wang, X., P.H. Stone and J. Marotzke (1999): Global Thermohaline Circulation. Part I: Sensitivity to Atmospheric Moisture Transport. Journal of Climate, 12: 71-82 (http://ams.allenpress.com/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1175/1520-0442%281999%29012%3C0071%3AGTCPIS%3E2.0.CO%3B2)
  • Joint Program Reprint
  • Journal Article
Global Thermohaline Circulation. Part I: Sensitivity to Atmospheric Moisture Transport

Wang, X., P.H. Stone and J. Marotzke

1999-1
12: 71-82

Abstract/Summary: 

A global ocean general circulation model of idealized geometry, combined with an atmospheric model based on observed transports of heat, momentum, and moisture, is used to explore the sensitivity of the global conveyor belt circulation to the surface freshwater fluxes, in particular the effects of meridional atmospheric moisture transports. The numerical results indicate that the equilibrium strength of the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) formation increases as the global freshwater transports increase. However, the global deep water formation, i.e., the sum of the NADW and the Southern Ocean Deep Water formation rates, is relatively insensitive to changes of the freshwater flux.
      Perturbations to the meridional moisture transports of each hemisphere identify equatorially asymmetric effects of the freshwater fluxes. The equilibrium NADW formation is primarily controlled by the magnitude of the Southern Hemisphere freshwater flux. The Northern Hemisphere freshwater flux only has a significant impact on the transient behavior of the North Atlantic overturning. Increasing this flux leads to a collapse of the conveyor belt circulation, but the collapse is delayed if the Southern Hemisphere flux also increases. The perturbation experiments also illustrate that the rapidity of collapse is affected by random fluctuations in the wind stress field.

© 1999 American Meteorological Society