John Marshall

Professor of Ocean and Climate Science

Mean climate and variability of the atmosphere and ocean on an aquaplanet

Mean climate and variability of the atmosphere and ocean on an aquaplanet.

(Marshall, John and Ferreira, David and Campin, J. -M. and Enderton, Daniel), JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, vol. 64, no. 12, pp. pages, 2007.

Abstract

Numerical experiments are described that pertain to the climate of a coupled atmosphere-ocean-ice system in the absence of land, driven by modern-day orbital and CO(2) forcing. Millennial time-scale simulations yield a mean state in which ice caps reach down to 55 degrees of latitude and both the atmosphere and ocean comprise eastward- and westward-flowing zonal jets, whose structure is set by their respective baroclinic instabilities. Despite the zonality of the ocean, it is remarkably efficient at transporting heat meridionally through the agency of Ekman transport and eddy-driven subduction. Indeed the partition of heat transport between the atmosphere and ocean is much the same as the present climate, with the ocean dominating in the Tropics and the atmosphere in the mid-high latitudes. Variability of the system is dominated by the coupling of annular modes in the atmosphere and ocean. Stochastic variability inherent to the atmospheric jets drives variability in the ocean. Zonal flows in the ocean exhibit decadal variability, which, remarkably, feeds back to the atmosphere, coloring the spectrum of annular variability. A simple stochastic model can capture the essence of the process. Finally, it is briefly reviewed how the aquaplanet can provide information about the processes that set the partition of heat transport and the climate of Earth.

doi = 10.1175/2007JAS2226.1