Predictability of the North Atlantic Sea Surface Temperatures in Observations and an Eddy-Resolving Coupled Climate Model

This study uses linear inverse modeling (LIM) to examine the predictability of North Atlantic sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in both observations and simulations of an unforced coupled climate model. For observations, historical North Atlantic SSTs from 1919 to 2018, we assess how predictability is...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martin, Jonathan
Other Authors: Burls, Natalie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1920/12131
Description
Summary:This study uses linear inverse modeling (LIM) to examine the predictability of North Atlantic sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in both observations and simulations of an unforced coupled climate model. For observations, historical North Atlantic SSTs from 1919 to 2018, we assess how predictability is impacted by the way in which the climate change signal is removed from the basin across three different observed SST datasets. In the climate model simulations, which possess no externally forced signal, we examine the influence of increasing the ocean resolution to an eddy resolving scale (0.1 degrees Lon/Lat) on the predictability of North Atlantic SSTs. Analysis of the observations ndfis that 1) SSTs in the Irminger Sea and Iceland Basin have the highest predictability within the North Atlantic and 2) basin averaged SSTs are predictable at a time scale of 3-5 years. The modes calculated based on the LIM supports these predictability results: all of the least damped modes, regardless of detrending method or dataset, indicate memory storage around the Irminger Sea and Iceland Basin with a decay timescale of 4.5 to 5 years. Neither the 3-5 year range of basin-wide predictability nor the enhanced Irminger Sea and Iceland Basin predictability are present in the SSTs of the eddy-resolving climate model. Examining the LIM eigenmodes for this dataset shows that the low Irminger Sea and Iceland Basin predictbaility is primarily the result of variable subsurface heat storage and a shallow mixed layer in these regions. It is worth noting that climate model's external forcing ( i.e. greenhouse gas and aerosol concentrations) is fixed and thus one possible caveat in comparing the results of the simulations to those of observations is that neither detrending method has completely removed the forced signal from observed SSTs. That said, the results of our study, regardless of detrending method, show the Irminger Sea and Iceland Basin to be highly predictable regions within the observed North Atlantic and the fact that this is ...