Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model

A damped oscillatory mode of the thermohaline circulation (THC), which may play a role in interdecadal climate variability, is identified in a global primitive equation model. This analysis is done under mixed boundary conditions using an adjoint of the primitive equation model. The linearized versu...

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Main Authors: Sirkes, Ziv, Tziperman, Eli
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: The Aquila Digital Community 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/3999
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/fac_pubs/article/4998/viewcontent/identifying_a_damped.pdf
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spelling ftsouthmissispun:oai:aquila.usm.edu:fac_pubs-4998 2023-07-30T04:05:31+02:00 Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model Sirkes, Ziv Tziperman, Eli 2001-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/3999 https://aquila.usm.edu/context/fac_pubs/article/4998/viewcontent/identifying_a_damped.pdf unknown The Aquila Digital Community https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/3999 https://aquila.usm.edu/context/fac_pubs/article/4998/viewcontent/identifying_a_damped.pdf Faculty Publications Life Sciences Marine Biology text 2001 ftsouthmissispun 2023-07-15T18:44:14Z A damped oscillatory mode of the thermohaline circulation (THC), which may play a role in interdecadal climate variability, is identified in a global primitive equation model. This analysis is done under mixed boundary conditions using an adjoint of the primitive equation model. The linearized versus nonlinear stability behavior of the model is studied by comparing the adjoint analysis to runs of the fully nonlinear model. It is shown that a steady-state solution obtained under larger amplitude freshwater surface forcing (and hence with a weaker North Atlantic overturning) is unstable, while a steady-state solution with stronger THC is stable. In a certain intermediate parameter regime it is found that the full nonlinear model state may be unstable, while the linearized analysis indicates that the model state is stable. It is proposed that this may be because either the instability mechanism at this intermediate regime is nonlinear or, while the model is linearly stable at this regime, it allows for temporary growth of small perturbations due to the non-normal nature of the problem. A clear signal of variations is not found in the amplitude of the horizontal gyre circulation, possibly indicating that the gyre effect that was found in THC oscillations in some previous studies may not be essential for the existence of the THC oscillation. The long timescale of the oscillation in the present model also seems to indicate that the gyre effect may not be a main active participant in the thermohaline oscillation mechanism. Text North Atlantic The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community
op_collection_id ftsouthmissispun
language unknown
topic Life Sciences
Marine Biology
spellingShingle Life Sciences
Marine Biology
Sirkes, Ziv
Tziperman, Eli
Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model
topic_facet Life Sciences
Marine Biology
description A damped oscillatory mode of the thermohaline circulation (THC), which may play a role in interdecadal climate variability, is identified in a global primitive equation model. This analysis is done under mixed boundary conditions using an adjoint of the primitive equation model. The linearized versus nonlinear stability behavior of the model is studied by comparing the adjoint analysis to runs of the fully nonlinear model. It is shown that a steady-state solution obtained under larger amplitude freshwater surface forcing (and hence with a weaker North Atlantic overturning) is unstable, while a steady-state solution with stronger THC is stable. In a certain intermediate parameter regime it is found that the full nonlinear model state may be unstable, while the linearized analysis indicates that the model state is stable. It is proposed that this may be because either the instability mechanism at this intermediate regime is nonlinear or, while the model is linearly stable at this regime, it allows for temporary growth of small perturbations due to the non-normal nature of the problem. A clear signal of variations is not found in the amplitude of the horizontal gyre circulation, possibly indicating that the gyre effect that was found in THC oscillations in some previous studies may not be essential for the existence of the THC oscillation. The long timescale of the oscillation in the present model also seems to indicate that the gyre effect may not be a main active participant in the thermohaline oscillation mechanism.
format Text
author Sirkes, Ziv
Tziperman, Eli
author_facet Sirkes, Ziv
Tziperman, Eli
author_sort Sirkes, Ziv
title Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model
title_short Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model
title_full Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model
title_fullStr Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model
title_full_unstemmed Identifying a Damped Oscillatory Thermohaline Mode in a General Circulation Model Using an Adjoint Model
title_sort identifying a damped oscillatory thermohaline mode in a general circulation model using an adjoint model
publisher The Aquila Digital Community
publishDate 2001
url https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/3999
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/fac_pubs/article/4998/viewcontent/identifying_a_damped.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Faculty Publications
op_relation https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/3999
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/fac_pubs/article/4998/viewcontent/identifying_a_damped.pdf
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