Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy

The heat and salt input from the Indian to Atlantic Oceans by Agulhas Leakage is found to influence the Atlantic overturning circulation in a low-resolution Ocean General Circulation Model. The model used is the Hamburg Large-Scale Geostrophic (LSG) model, which is forced by mixed boundary condition...

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Main Authors: Weijer, W., Ruijter, W.P.M. de, Sterl, A., Drijfhout, S.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/2604
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spelling ftunivutrecht:oai:dspace.library.uu.nl:1874/2604 2023-07-23T04:20:30+02:00 Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy Weijer, W. Ruijter, W.P.M. de Sterl, A. Drijfhout, S. 2001-02-02 application/pdf https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/2604 en eng 0921-8181 https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/2604 info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess Natuur- en Sterrenkunde thermohaline circulation climate ocean circulation South Atlantic Preprint 2001 ftunivutrecht 2023-07-01T22:43:53Z The heat and salt input from the Indian to Atlantic Oceans by Agulhas Leakage is found to influence the Atlantic overturning circulation in a low-resolution Ocean General Circulation Model. The model used is the Hamburg Large-Scale Geostrophic (LSG) model, which is forced by mixed boundary conditions. Agulhas Leakage is parameterized by sources of heat and salt in the upper South Atlantic Ocean, that extend well into the intermediate layers. It is shown that the model’s overturning circulation is sensitive to the applied sources of heat and salt. The response of the overturning strength to changes in the source amplitudes is mainly linear, interrupted once by a stepwise change. The South Atlantic buoyancy sources influence the Atlantic overturning strength by modifying the basin-scale meridional density and pressure gradients. The nonlinear, stepwise response is caused by abrupt changes in the convective activity in the northern North Atlantic. Two additional experiments illustrate the adjustment of the overturning circulation upon sudden introduction of heat and salt sources in the South Atlantic. The North Atlantic overturning circulation responds within a few years after the sources are switched on. This is the time it takes for barotropic and baroclinic Kelvin waves to reach the northern North Atlantic. The advection of the anomalies takes 3 decades to reach the northern North Atlantic. The model results give support to the hypothesis that the re-opening of the Agulhas Gap at the end of the last ice-age, as indicated by palaeoclimatological data, may have stimulated the coincident strengthening of the Atlantic overturning circulation. Report North Atlantic South Atlantic Ocean Utrecht University Repository Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Utrecht University Repository
op_collection_id ftunivutrecht
language English
topic Natuur- en Sterrenkunde
thermohaline circulation
climate
ocean circulation
South Atlantic
spellingShingle Natuur- en Sterrenkunde
thermohaline circulation
climate
ocean circulation
South Atlantic
Weijer, W.
Ruijter, W.P.M. de
Sterl, A.
Drijfhout, S.
Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy
topic_facet Natuur- en Sterrenkunde
thermohaline circulation
climate
ocean circulation
South Atlantic
description The heat and salt input from the Indian to Atlantic Oceans by Agulhas Leakage is found to influence the Atlantic overturning circulation in a low-resolution Ocean General Circulation Model. The model used is the Hamburg Large-Scale Geostrophic (LSG) model, which is forced by mixed boundary conditions. Agulhas Leakage is parameterized by sources of heat and salt in the upper South Atlantic Ocean, that extend well into the intermediate layers. It is shown that the model’s overturning circulation is sensitive to the applied sources of heat and salt. The response of the overturning strength to changes in the source amplitudes is mainly linear, interrupted once by a stepwise change. The South Atlantic buoyancy sources influence the Atlantic overturning strength by modifying the basin-scale meridional density and pressure gradients. The nonlinear, stepwise response is caused by abrupt changes in the convective activity in the northern North Atlantic. Two additional experiments illustrate the adjustment of the overturning circulation upon sudden introduction of heat and salt sources in the South Atlantic. The North Atlantic overturning circulation responds within a few years after the sources are switched on. This is the time it takes for barotropic and baroclinic Kelvin waves to reach the northern North Atlantic. The advection of the anomalies takes 3 decades to reach the northern North Atlantic. The model results give support to the hypothesis that the re-opening of the Agulhas Gap at the end of the last ice-age, as indicated by palaeoclimatological data, may have stimulated the coincident strengthening of the Atlantic overturning circulation.
format Report
author Weijer, W.
Ruijter, W.P.M. de
Sterl, A.
Drijfhout, S.
author_facet Weijer, W.
Ruijter, W.P.M. de
Sterl, A.
Drijfhout, S.
author_sort Weijer, W.
title Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy
title_short Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy
title_full Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy
title_fullStr Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy
title_full_unstemmed Response of the Atlantic overturning circulation to South Atlantic sources of buoyancy
title_sort response of the atlantic overturning circulation to south atlantic sources of buoyancy
publishDate 2001
url https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/2604
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre North Atlantic
South Atlantic Ocean
genre_facet North Atlantic
South Atlantic Ocean
op_relation 0921-8181
https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/2604
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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