The impacts of oceanic deep temperature perturbations in the North Atlantic on decadal climate variability and predictability
GERME, Agathe
Processus de la variabilité climatique tropicale et impacts [PARVATI]
National Oceanography Centre [Southampton] [NOC]
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Processus de la variabilité climatique tropicale et impacts [PARVATI]
National Oceanography Centre [Southampton] [NOC]
GERME, Agathe
Processus de la variabilité climatique tropicale et impacts [PARVATI]
National Oceanography Centre [Southampton] [NOC]
Processus de la variabilité climatique tropicale et impacts [PARVATI]
National Oceanography Centre [Southampton] [NOC]
NGUYEN, Sébastien
Laboratoire d'Océanographie et du Climat : Expérimentations et Approches Numériques [LOCEAN]
< Reduce
Laboratoire d'Océanographie et du Climat : Expérimentations et Approches Numériques [LOCEAN]
Language
EN
Article de revue
This item was published in
Climate Dynamics. 2018-09, vol. 51, n° 5-6, p. 2341 - 2357
English Abstract
Decadal climate predictability in the North Atlantic is largely related to ocean low frequency variability, whose sensitivity to initial conditions is not very well understood. Recently, three-dimensional oceanic temperature ...Read more >
Decadal climate predictability in the North Atlantic is largely related to ocean low frequency variability, whose sensitivity to initial conditions is not very well understood. Recently, three-dimensional oceanic temperature anomalies optimally perturbing the North Atlantic Mean Temperature (NAMT) have been computed via an optimization procedure using a linear adjoint to a realistic ocean general circulation model. The spatial pattern of the identified perturbations, localized in the North Atlantic, has the largest magnitude between 1000 and 4000 m depth. In the present study, the impacts of these perturbations on NAMT, on the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), and on climate in general are investigated in a global coupled model that uses the same ocean model as was used to compute the three-dimensional optimal perturbations. In the coupled model, these perturbations induce AMOC and NAMT anomalies peaking after 5 and 10 years, respectively, generally consistent with the ocean-only linear predictions. To further understand their impact, their magnitude was varied in a broad range. For initial perturbations with a magnitude comparable to the internal variability of the coupled model, the model response exhibits a strong signature in sea surface temperature and precipitation over North America and the Sahel region. The existence and impacts of these ocean perturbations have important implications for decadal prediction: they can be seen either as a source of predictability or uncertainty, depending on whether the current observing system can detect them or not. In fact, comparing the magnitude of the imposed perturbations with the uncertainty of available ocean observations such as Argo data or ocean state estimates suggests that only the largest perturbations used in this study could be detectable. This highlights the importance for decadal climate prediction of accurate ocean density initialisation in the North Atlantic at intermediate and greater depths.Read less <
English Keywords
Initial condition uncertainties
Linear optimal perturbations
North Atlantic variability
Atlantic meridional overturning circulation
IPSL-CM5A
Decadal climate predictability
European Project
Seasonal-to-decadal climate Prediction for the improvement of EuropeanClimate Services