Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean

During Cold Air Outbreak (CAO) events over North America during winter, cold dry air is often advected over the ocean offshore of the East Coast. A motivating hypothesis of this study is that the air-sea fluxes associated with CAO events will be manifested in offshore ocean variations that will be a...

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Main Author: Strey, Sara Theresa
Other Authors: Walsh, John E., Nesbitt, Stephen W., Kristovich, David A. R., Vavrus, Steve
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/95365
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivillidea:oai:www.ideals.illinois.edu:2142/95365 2024-10-13T14:09:12+00:00 Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean Strey, Sara Theresa Walsh, John E. Nesbitt, Stephen W. Kristovich, David A. R. Vavrus, Steve 2016-12 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2142/95365 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/2142/95365 Copyright 2016 Sara T. Strey Cold air outbreaks Gulf Stream Thermohaline Circulation Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation Density text 2016 ftunivillidea 2024-10-01T12:57:50Z During Cold Air Outbreak (CAO) events over North America during winter, cold dry air is often advected over the ocean offshore of the East Coast. A motivating hypothesis of this study is that the air-sea fluxes associated with CAO events will be manifested in offshore ocean variations that will be advected poleward by the Gulf Stream, possibly impacting the subpolar regions where oceanic deep convection drives the thermohaline circulation. This study uses an observational data analysis and model experiments with CESM’s Parallel Ocean Processor to examine CAO intensive winters alongside contrasting years of winter warm events to quantify impacts on the North Atlantic Ocean, including the subpolar seas. The main findings of this study do not confirm the original hypotheses about downstream (subpolar) oceanic impacts of cold air outbreaks. They do, however, provide information relevant to the variability of the subpolar North Atlantic. In particular, the observational analysis shows that CAOs over the Gulf Stream produce large upward sensible and latent heat fluxes from the ocean to the atmosphere. These fluxes remove heat from the ocean’s mixed layer, altering temperatures in the upper ocean. The model experiments show similar results off of the East Coast of the US, with colder, denser waters over the Gulf Stream in CAO years and associated variations of density patterns in the subpolar North Atlantic. Wind forcing from regions of warm air advection further north dominates downstream impacts of CAOs over the Gulf Stream, as the model experiments show regions of warmer, less dense water in the geographic region of North Atlantic Deep Water formation. This bipolarity of the wind forcing and its oceanic impacts are manifestations of the North Atlantic Oscillation. The results indicate that the NAO may well be the key to ocean variations that drive the global thermohaline circulation. Submission original under an indefinite embargo labeled 'Open Access'. The submission was exported from vireo on 2017-02-28 without ... Text North Atlantic Deep Water North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship)
op_collection_id ftunivillidea
language English
topic Cold air outbreaks
Gulf Stream
Thermohaline Circulation
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
Density
spellingShingle Cold air outbreaks
Gulf Stream
Thermohaline Circulation
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
Density
Strey, Sara Theresa
Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean
topic_facet Cold air outbreaks
Gulf Stream
Thermohaline Circulation
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
Density
description During Cold Air Outbreak (CAO) events over North America during winter, cold dry air is often advected over the ocean offshore of the East Coast. A motivating hypothesis of this study is that the air-sea fluxes associated with CAO events will be manifested in offshore ocean variations that will be advected poleward by the Gulf Stream, possibly impacting the subpolar regions where oceanic deep convection drives the thermohaline circulation. This study uses an observational data analysis and model experiments with CESM’s Parallel Ocean Processor to examine CAO intensive winters alongside contrasting years of winter warm events to quantify impacts on the North Atlantic Ocean, including the subpolar seas. The main findings of this study do not confirm the original hypotheses about downstream (subpolar) oceanic impacts of cold air outbreaks. They do, however, provide information relevant to the variability of the subpolar North Atlantic. In particular, the observational analysis shows that CAOs over the Gulf Stream produce large upward sensible and latent heat fluxes from the ocean to the atmosphere. These fluxes remove heat from the ocean’s mixed layer, altering temperatures in the upper ocean. The model experiments show similar results off of the East Coast of the US, with colder, denser waters over the Gulf Stream in CAO years and associated variations of density patterns in the subpolar North Atlantic. Wind forcing from regions of warm air advection further north dominates downstream impacts of CAOs over the Gulf Stream, as the model experiments show regions of warmer, less dense water in the geographic region of North Atlantic Deep Water formation. This bipolarity of the wind forcing and its oceanic impacts are manifestations of the North Atlantic Oscillation. The results indicate that the NAO may well be the key to ocean variations that drive the global thermohaline circulation. Submission original under an indefinite embargo labeled 'Open Access'. The submission was exported from vireo on 2017-02-28 without ...
author2 Walsh, John E.
Nesbitt, Stephen W.
Kristovich, David A. R.
Vavrus, Steve
format Text
author Strey, Sara Theresa
author_facet Strey, Sara Theresa
author_sort Strey, Sara Theresa
title Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean
title_short Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean
title_full Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean
title_fullStr Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Cold air outbreaks over the Gulf Stream and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean
title_sort cold air outbreaks over the gulf stream and implications for the north atlantic ocean
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2142/95365
genre North Atlantic Deep Water
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet North Atlantic Deep Water
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2142/95365
op_rights Copyright 2016 Sara T. Strey
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