4.7 Article

Two Decades of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation: Anatomy, Variations, Extremes, Prediction, and Overcoming Its Limitations

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 26, Issue 18, Pages 7167-7186

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00478.1

Keywords

Meridional overturning circulation; Climate prediction; Climate variability; Decadal variability

Funding

  1. NASA
  2. NOAA through AMOC
  3. ECCO
  4. Directorate For Geosciences
  5. Office of Polar Programs (OPP) [1023499, 1118473] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The zonally integrated meridional volume transport in the North Atlantic [Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC)] is described in a 19-yr-long ocean-state estimate, one consistent with a diverse global dataset. Apart from a weak increasing trend at high northern latitudes, the AMOC appears statistically stable over the last 19 yr with fluctuations indistinguishable from those of a stationary Gaussian stochastic process. This characterization makes it possible to study (using highly developed tools) extreme values, predictability, and the statistical significance of apparent trends. Gaussian behavior is consistent with the central limit theorem for a process arising from numerous independent disturbances. In this case, generators include internal instabilities, changes in wind and buoyancy forcing fields, boundary waves, the Gulf Stream and deep western boundary current transports, the interior fraction in Sverdrup balance, and all similar phenomena arriving as summation effects from long distances and times. As a zonal integral through the sum of the large variety of physical processes in the three-dimensional ocean circulation, understanding of the AMOC, if it is of central climate importance, requires breaking it down into its unintegrated components over the entire basin.

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