John Marshall

Professor of Ocean and Climate Science

Impact of anomalous ocean heat transport on the North Atlantic oscillation

Impact of anomalous ocean heat transport on the North Atlantic oscillation.

(D’Andrea, F and Czaja, A and Marshall, J), JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, vol. 18, no. 23, pp. pages, 2005.

Abstract

Coupled atmosphere – ocean dynamics in the North Atlantic is studied by means of a simple model, featuring a baroclinic three-dimensional atmosphere coupled to a slab ocean. Anomalous oceanic heat transport due to wind-driven circulation is parameterized in terms of a delayed response to the change in wind stress curl due to the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Climate variability for different strengths of ocean heat transport efficiency is analyzed. Two types of behavior are found depending on time scale. At interdecadal and longer time scales, a negative feedback is found that leads to a reduction in the spectral power of the NAO. By greatly increasing the efficiency of ocean heat transport, the NAO in the model can be made to completely vanish from the principal modes of variability at low frequency. This suggests that the observed NAO variability at these time scales must be due to mechanisms other than the interaction with wind- driven circulation. At decadal time scales, a coupled oscillation is found in which SST and geopotential height fields covary.

doi = 10.1175/JCLI3575.1