Sensitivity of Antarctic bottom water to changes in surface buoyancy fluxes

The influence of freshwater and heat flux changes on Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) properties are investigated within a realistic bathymetry coupled oceanice sector model of the Atlantic Ocean. The model simulations are conducted at eddy-permitting resolution where dense shelf water production domin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Climate
Main Authors: Snow, K, Hogg, AMcC, Sloyan, BM, Downes, SM
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Amer Meteorological Soc 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0467.1
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/109410
Description
Summary:The influence of freshwater and heat flux changes on Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) properties are investigated within a realistic bathymetry coupled oceanice sector model of the Atlantic Ocean. The model simulations are conducted at eddy-permitting resolution where dense shelf water production dominates over open ocean convection in forming AABW. Freshwater and heat flux perturbations are applied independently and have contradictory surface responses, with increased upper-ocean temperature and reduced ice formation under heating and the opposite under increased freshwater fluxes. AABW transport into the abyssal ocean reduces under both flux changes, with the reduction in transport being proportional to the net buoyancy flux anomaly south of 60S. Through inclusion of shelf-sourced AABW, a process absent from most current generation climate models, cooling and freshening of dense source water is facilitated via reduced on-shelf/off-shelf exchange flow. Such cooling is propagated to the abyssal ocean, while compensating warming in the deep ocean under heating introduces a decadal-scale variability of the abyssal water masses. This study emphasizes the fundamental role buoyancy plays in controlling AABW, as well as the importance of the inclusion of shelf-sourced AABW within climate models in order to attain the complete spectrum of possible climate change responses.