North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics

Western Boundary Currents, such as the Gulf Stream, are regions of vivid air-sea interaction. Mesoscale features of these currents play a fundamental role in global ocean heat transport and exchange with the atmosphere. Related processes and their interactions across scales have gained increasing at...

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Main Authors: Drews, Annika, Matthes, Katja, Martin, Torge, Harlass, Jan, Biastoch, Arne
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/49057/
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spelling ftoceanrep:oai:oceanrep.geomar.de:49057 2023-05-15T17:25:20+02:00 North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics Drews, Annika Matthes, Katja Martin, Torge Harlass, Jan Biastoch, Arne 2020-02-20 https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/49057/ unknown Drews, A. , Matthes, K. , Martin, T. , Harlass, J. and Biastoch, A. (2020) North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics. [Talk] In: Ocean Sciences Meeting 2020. , 16.-21.02.2020, San Diego, USA . info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed 2020 ftoceanrep 2023-04-07T15:49:37Z Western Boundary Currents, such as the Gulf Stream, are regions of vivid air-sea interaction. Mesoscale features of these currents play a fundamental role in global ocean heat transport and exchange with the atmosphere. Related processes and their interactions across scales have gained increasing attention in the last years, since high-resolution, mesoscale-resolving modeling became computationally feasible on climate time scales. Here, we show the impact of explicitly resolving the oceanic mesoscale in the coupled global climate model FOCI on North Atlantic and European climate. For this purpose, we use the ocean nesting capability in FOCI, which facilitates regional ocean grid refinement. We explore and compare pre-industrial simulations each extending over at least 150 years: a reference run without any grid refinement and an experiment with a nest in the North Atlantic. Technically, the regional ocean nest maintains frequent two-way exchange with the global host grid, which in turn is fully coupled to the atmosphere model. The ocean model NEMO has a global resolution of 1/2˚ model with 46 vertical levels and 1/10˚ refinement in the nest region, while the atmosphere model ECHAM6 has a 1.8˚ horizontal resolution (T63) and 95 vertical levels, including the strato- and mesosphere. Within the nest region, the increased resolution leads to a more eddy-rich simulation and an improved mean state. The North Atlantic Current is considerably better represented, which reduces the typical North Atlantic cold bias from -8˚C in the reference run without nest to -2˚C. Beyond local bias correction of the mean state, we will also discuss the impact of explicitly modeling ocean mesoscale dynamics on atmospheric variability on different time scales, such as the North Atlantic Oscillation or the Atlantic Multidecadal Variability. Conference Object north atlantic current North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel)
institution Open Polar
collection OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel)
op_collection_id ftoceanrep
language unknown
description Western Boundary Currents, such as the Gulf Stream, are regions of vivid air-sea interaction. Mesoscale features of these currents play a fundamental role in global ocean heat transport and exchange with the atmosphere. Related processes and their interactions across scales have gained increasing attention in the last years, since high-resolution, mesoscale-resolving modeling became computationally feasible on climate time scales. Here, we show the impact of explicitly resolving the oceanic mesoscale in the coupled global climate model FOCI on North Atlantic and European climate. For this purpose, we use the ocean nesting capability in FOCI, which facilitates regional ocean grid refinement. We explore and compare pre-industrial simulations each extending over at least 150 years: a reference run without any grid refinement and an experiment with a nest in the North Atlantic. Technically, the regional ocean nest maintains frequent two-way exchange with the global host grid, which in turn is fully coupled to the atmosphere model. The ocean model NEMO has a global resolution of 1/2˚ model with 46 vertical levels and 1/10˚ refinement in the nest region, while the atmosphere model ECHAM6 has a 1.8˚ horizontal resolution (T63) and 95 vertical levels, including the strato- and mesosphere. Within the nest region, the increased resolution leads to a more eddy-rich simulation and an improved mean state. The North Atlantic Current is considerably better represented, which reduces the typical North Atlantic cold bias from -8˚C in the reference run without nest to -2˚C. Beyond local bias correction of the mean state, we will also discuss the impact of explicitly modeling ocean mesoscale dynamics on atmospheric variability on different time scales, such as the North Atlantic Oscillation or the Atlantic Multidecadal Variability.
format Conference Object
author Drews, Annika
Matthes, Katja
Martin, Torge
Harlass, Jan
Biastoch, Arne
spellingShingle Drews, Annika
Matthes, Katja
Martin, Torge
Harlass, Jan
Biastoch, Arne
North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics
author_facet Drews, Annika
Matthes, Katja
Martin, Torge
Harlass, Jan
Biastoch, Arne
author_sort Drews, Annika
title North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics
title_short North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics
title_full North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics
title_fullStr North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics
title_full_unstemmed North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics
title_sort north atlantic climate mean state and variability: local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics
publishDate 2020
url https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/49057/
genre north atlantic current
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet north atlantic current
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation Drews, A. , Matthes, K. , Martin, T. , Harlass, J. and Biastoch, A. (2020) North Atlantic climate mean state and variability: Local effects of mesoscale ocean dynamics. [Talk] In: Ocean Sciences Meeting 2020. , 16.-21.02.2020, San Diego, USA .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
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