The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth

To understand the three-dimensional ocean circulation patterns that have occurred in past continental geometries, it is crucial to study the role of the present-day continental geometry and surface (wind stress and buoyancy) forcing on the present-day global ocean circulation. This circulation, ofte...

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Main Authors: Kamphuis, V., Huisman, S.E., Dijkstra, H.A.
Other Authors: Marine and Atmospheric Research, Sub Physical Oceanography
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/231413
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spelling ftunivutrecht:oai:dspace.library.uu.nl:1874/231413 2023-07-23T04:20:43+02:00 The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth Kamphuis, V. Huisman, S.E. Dijkstra, H.A. Marine and Atmospheric Research Sub Physical Oceanography 2011 image/pdf https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/231413 en eng 1814-9324 https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/231413 info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess Article 2011 ftunivutrecht 2023-07-02T00:05:37Z To understand the three-dimensional ocean circulation patterns that have occurred in past continental geometries, it is crucial to study the role of the present-day continental geometry and surface (wind stress and buoyancy) forcing on the present-day global ocean circulation. This circulation, often referred to as the Conveyor state, is characterised by an Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) with a deep water formation at northern latitudes and the absence of such a deep water formation in the North Pacific. This MOC asymmetry is often attributed to the difference in surface freshwater flux: the Atlantic as a whole is a basin with net evaporation, while the Pacific receives net precipitation. This issue is revisited in this paper by considering the global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth, computing an equilibrium state of the coupled atmosphere-ocean-land surface-sea ice model CCSM3. The Atlantic-Pacific asymmetry in surface freshwater flux is indeed reversed, but the ocean circulation pattern is not an Inverse Conveyor state (with deep water formation in the North Pacific) as there is relatively weak but intermittently strong deep water formation in the North Atlantic. Using a fully-implicit, global ocean-only model the stability properties of the Atlantic MOC on a retrograde rotating earth are also investigated, showing a similar regime of multiple equilibria as in the present-day case. These results indicate that the present-day asymmetry in surface freshwater flux is not the most important factor setting the Atlantic-Pacific salinity difference and, thereby, the asymmetry in the global MOC. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Sea ice Utrecht University Repository Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Utrecht University Repository
op_collection_id ftunivutrecht
language English
description To understand the three-dimensional ocean circulation patterns that have occurred in past continental geometries, it is crucial to study the role of the present-day continental geometry and surface (wind stress and buoyancy) forcing on the present-day global ocean circulation. This circulation, often referred to as the Conveyor state, is characterised by an Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) with a deep water formation at northern latitudes and the absence of such a deep water formation in the North Pacific. This MOC asymmetry is often attributed to the difference in surface freshwater flux: the Atlantic as a whole is a basin with net evaporation, while the Pacific receives net precipitation. This issue is revisited in this paper by considering the global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth, computing an equilibrium state of the coupled atmosphere-ocean-land surface-sea ice model CCSM3. The Atlantic-Pacific asymmetry in surface freshwater flux is indeed reversed, but the ocean circulation pattern is not an Inverse Conveyor state (with deep water formation in the North Pacific) as there is relatively weak but intermittently strong deep water formation in the North Atlantic. Using a fully-implicit, global ocean-only model the stability properties of the Atlantic MOC on a retrograde rotating earth are also investigated, showing a similar regime of multiple equilibria as in the present-day case. These results indicate that the present-day asymmetry in surface freshwater flux is not the most important factor setting the Atlantic-Pacific salinity difference and, thereby, the asymmetry in the global MOC.
author2 Marine and Atmospheric Research
Sub Physical Oceanography
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kamphuis, V.
Huisman, S.E.
Dijkstra, H.A.
spellingShingle Kamphuis, V.
Huisman, S.E.
Dijkstra, H.A.
The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth
author_facet Kamphuis, V.
Huisman, S.E.
Dijkstra, H.A.
author_sort Kamphuis, V.
title The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth
title_short The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth
title_full The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth
title_fullStr The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth
title_full_unstemmed The global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth
title_sort global ocean circulation on a retrograde rotating earth
publishDate 2011
url https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/231413
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
Sea ice
genre_facet North Atlantic
Sea ice
op_relation 1814-9324
https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/231413
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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