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contributor authorPalter, Jaime B.
contributor authorGriffies, Stephen M.
contributor authorSamuels, Bonita L.
contributor authorGalbraith, Eric D.
contributor authorGnanadesikan, Anand
contributor authorKlocker, Andreas
date accessioned2017-06-09T17:08:08Z
date available2017-06-09T17:08:08Z
date copyright2014/01/01
date issued2013
identifier issn0894-8755
identifier otherams-79920.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4222753
description abstractespite slow rates of ocean mixing, observational and modeling studies suggest that buoyancy is redistributed to all depths of the ocean on surprisingly short interannual to decadal time scales. The mechanisms responsible for this redistribution remain poorly understood. This work uses an Earth system model to evaluate the global steady-state ocean buoyancy (and related steric sea level) budget, its interannual variability, and its transient response to a doubling of CO2 over 70 years, with a focus on the deep ocean. At steady state, the simple view of vertical advective?diffusive balance for the deep ocean holds at low to midlatitudes. At higher latitudes, the balance depends on a myriad of additional terms, namely mesoscale and submesoscale advection, convection and overflows from marginal seas, and terms related to the nonlinear equation of state. These high-latitude processes rapidly communicate anomalies in surface buoyancy forcing to the deep ocean locally; the deep, high-latitude changes then influence the large-scale advection of buoyancy to create transient deep buoyancy anomalies at lower latitudes. Following a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, the high-latitude buoyancy sinks are suppressed by a slowdown in convection and reduced dense water formation. This change is accompanied by a slowing of both upper and lower cells of the global meridional overturning circulation, reducing the supply of dense water to low latitudes beneath the pycnocline and the commensurate flow of light waters to high latitudes above the pycnocline. By this mechanism, changes in high-latitude buoyancy are communicated to the global deep ocean on relatively fast advective time scales.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleThe Deep Ocean Buoyancy Budget and Its Temporal Variability
typeJournal Paper
journal volume27
journal issue2
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-13-00016.1
journal fristpage551
journal lastpage573
treeJournal of Climate:;2013:;volume( 027 ):;issue: 002
contenttypeFulltext


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