A conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change

© 2014 American Meteorological Society. Aconceptual model of ocean heat uptake is developed as a multilayer generalization of Gnanadesikan. The roles of Southern Ocean Ekman and eddy transports, North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) formation, and diapycnal mixing in controlling ocean stratification and...

Fuld beskrivelse

Bibliografiske detaljer
Main Authors: Marshall, D, Zanna, L
Format: Journal article
Udgivet: American Meteorological Society 2014
_version_ 1826261899393630208
author Marshall, D
Zanna, L
author_facet Marshall, D
Zanna, L
author_sort Marshall, D
collection OXFORD
description © 2014 American Meteorological Society. Aconceptual model of ocean heat uptake is developed as a multilayer generalization of Gnanadesikan. The roles of Southern Ocean Ekman and eddy transports, North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) formation, and diapycnal mixing in controlling ocean stratification and transient heat uptake are investigated under climate change scenarios, including imposed surface warming, increased Southern Ocean wind forcing, with or without eddy compensation, and weakened meridional overturning circulation (MOC) induced by reduced NADW formation. With realistic profiles of diapycnal mixing, ocean heat uptake is dominated by Southern Ocean Ekman transport and its long-term adjustment controlled by the Southern Ocean eddy transport. The time scale of adjustment setting the rate of ocean heat uptake increases with depth. For scenarios with increased Southern Ocean wind forcing or weakened MOC, deepened stratification results in enhanced ocean heat uptake. In each of these experiments, the role of diapycnal mixing in setting ocean stratification and heat uptake is secondary. Conversely, in experiments with enhanced diapycnal mixing as employed in ''upwelling diffusion'' slab models, the contributions of diapycnal mixing and Southern Ocean Ekman transport to the net heat uptake are comparable, but the stratification extends unrealistically to the sea floor. The simple model is applied to interpret the output of an Earth system model, the Second Generation Canadian Earth System Model (CanESM2), in which the atmospheric CO2 concentration is increased by 1%yr-1 until quadrupling, where it is found that Southern Ocean Ekman transport is essential to reproduce the magnitude and vertical profile of ocean heat uptake.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:27:50Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:1c64105c-605a-4210-b7f5-2aaaa4545c78
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:27:50Z
publishDate 2014
publisher American Meteorological Society
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:1c64105c-605a-4210-b7f5-2aaaa4545c782022-03-26T11:05:23ZA conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate changeJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1c64105c-605a-4210-b7f5-2aaaa4545c78Symplectic Elements at OxfordAmerican Meteorological Society2014Marshall, DZanna, L© 2014 American Meteorological Society. Aconceptual model of ocean heat uptake is developed as a multilayer generalization of Gnanadesikan. The roles of Southern Ocean Ekman and eddy transports, North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) formation, and diapycnal mixing in controlling ocean stratification and transient heat uptake are investigated under climate change scenarios, including imposed surface warming, increased Southern Ocean wind forcing, with or without eddy compensation, and weakened meridional overturning circulation (MOC) induced by reduced NADW formation. With realistic profiles of diapycnal mixing, ocean heat uptake is dominated by Southern Ocean Ekman transport and its long-term adjustment controlled by the Southern Ocean eddy transport. The time scale of adjustment setting the rate of ocean heat uptake increases with depth. For scenarios with increased Southern Ocean wind forcing or weakened MOC, deepened stratification results in enhanced ocean heat uptake. In each of these experiments, the role of diapycnal mixing in setting ocean stratification and heat uptake is secondary. Conversely, in experiments with enhanced diapycnal mixing as employed in ''upwelling diffusion'' slab models, the contributions of diapycnal mixing and Southern Ocean Ekman transport to the net heat uptake are comparable, but the stratification extends unrealistically to the sea floor. The simple model is applied to interpret the output of an Earth system model, the Second Generation Canadian Earth System Model (CanESM2), in which the atmospheric CO2 concentration is increased by 1%yr-1 until quadrupling, where it is found that Southern Ocean Ekman transport is essential to reproduce the magnitude and vertical profile of ocean heat uptake.
spellingShingle Marshall, D
Zanna, L
A conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change
title A conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change
title_full A conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change
title_fullStr A conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change
title_full_unstemmed A conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change
title_short A conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change
title_sort conceptual model of ocean heat uptake under climate change
work_keys_str_mv AT marshalld aconceptualmodelofoceanheatuptakeunderclimatechange
AT zannal aconceptualmodelofoceanheatuptakeunderclimatechange
AT marshalld conceptualmodelofoceanheatuptakeunderclimatechange
AT zannal conceptualmodelofoceanheatuptakeunderclimatechange