4.7 Article

A Mechanism of Internal Decadal Atlantic Ocean Variability in a High-Resolution Coupled Climate Model

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 28, Issue 19, Pages 7764-7785

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0106.1

Keywords

North Atlantic Ocean; Sea surface temperature; Thermohaline circulation; Atmosphere-ocean interaction; Climate models; Decadal variability

Funding

  1. DECC [GA01101]
  2. Defra Hadley Centre Climate Programme, DECC/Defra [GA01101]
  3. NERC through the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS)
  4. Projet Previsibilit Climatique Decennale (PRECLIDE)
  5. Seasonal-to-Decadal Climate Prediction for the Improvement of European Climate Services (SPECS) project [GA 308378]
  6. Natural Environment Research Council
  7. Natural Environment Research Council [ncas10009] Funding Source: researchfish

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The North Atlantic Ocean subpolar gyre (NA SPG) is an important region for initializing decadal climate forecasts. Climate model simulations and paleoclimate reconstructions have indicated that this region could also exhibit large, internally generated variability on decadal time scales. Understanding these modes of variability, their consistency across models, and the conditions in which they exist is clearly important for improving the skill of decadal predictionsparticularly when these predictions are made with the same underlying climate models. This study describes and analyzes a mode of internal variability in the NA SPG in a state-of-the-art, high-resolution, coupled climate model. This mode has a period of 17 yr and explains 15%-30% of the annual variance in related ocean indices. It arises because of the advection of heat content anomalies around the NA SPG. Anomalous circulation drives the variability in the southern half of the NA SPG, while mean circulation and anomalous temperatures are important in the northern half. A negative feedback between Labrador Sea temperatures/densities and those in the North Atlantic Current (NAC) is identified, which allows for the phase reversal. The atmosphere is found to act as a positive feedback on this mode via the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), which itself exhibits a spectral peak at 17 yr. Decadal ocean density changes associated with this mode are driven by variations in temperature rather than salinitya point which models often disagree on and which may affect the veracity of the underlying assumptions of anomaly-assimilating decadal prediction methodologies.

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