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Impact on the ocean of extreme Greenland Sea heat loss in the HadCM3 coupled ocean atmosphere model

Impact on the ocean of extreme Greenland Sea heat loss in the HadCM3 coupled ocean atmosphere model
Impact on the ocean of extreme Greenland Sea heat loss in the HadCM3 coupled ocean atmosphere model
The ocean response to air-sea flux variability in the Greenland Sea is investigated using a 1000 year run of the coupled ocean-atmosphere model HadCM3. Evaluation of the density flux reveals that net heat flux anomalies have a greater impact on surface density changes than anomalies in both net evaporation and ice melt/formation. Averaged over the Greenland Sea, the annual mean density flux due to heat loss is 1.8 × 10?6 kg m?2 s?1, an order of magnitude greater than the net evaporation and the ice melt and formation terms, which are ?0.1 and ?0.2 × 10?6 kg m?2 s?1, respectively. Extreme winter heat loss events reach 250 W m?2 and are associated with reduced ice cover and anomalously strong northerly airflow over the Greenland Sea. They result in enhanced convection and modify the properties of deep water flowing south through the Denmark Strait. The deep water transport increases by about 30% when the strongest and weakest heat loss events are compared, and there is a corresponding reduction in temperature and salinity by up to 2.3°C and 0.38 psu. We also find significant correlations between deep western basin temperatures at 60°, 55°, and 49°N and the Greenland Sea heat flux anomalies which peak at lags of up to 4 years with the time delay increasing toward more southerly latitudes. Our results suggest that Greenland Sea heat flux variability is a key variable for understanding recent observations of significant interannual variability in Denmark Strait transport characteristics.
Greenland Sea, heat flux, Denmark Strait
0148-0227
C04014
Grist, J.P.
ffea99af-f811-436f-9bac-5b02ba6dc00f
Josey, S.A.
2252ab7f-5cd2-49fd-a951-aece44553d93
Sinha, B.
544b5a07-3d74-464b-9470-a68c69bd722e
Grist, J.P.
ffea99af-f811-436f-9bac-5b02ba6dc00f
Josey, S.A.
2252ab7f-5cd2-49fd-a951-aece44553d93
Sinha, B.
544b5a07-3d74-464b-9470-a68c69bd722e

Grist, J.P., Josey, S.A. and Sinha, B. (2007) Impact on the ocean of extreme Greenland Sea heat loss in the HadCM3 coupled ocean atmosphere model. Journal of Geophysical Research, 114 (C4), C04014. (doi:10.1029/2006JC003629).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The ocean response to air-sea flux variability in the Greenland Sea is investigated using a 1000 year run of the coupled ocean-atmosphere model HadCM3. Evaluation of the density flux reveals that net heat flux anomalies have a greater impact on surface density changes than anomalies in both net evaporation and ice melt/formation. Averaged over the Greenland Sea, the annual mean density flux due to heat loss is 1.8 × 10?6 kg m?2 s?1, an order of magnitude greater than the net evaporation and the ice melt and formation terms, which are ?0.1 and ?0.2 × 10?6 kg m?2 s?1, respectively. Extreme winter heat loss events reach 250 W m?2 and are associated with reduced ice cover and anomalously strong northerly airflow over the Greenland Sea. They result in enhanced convection and modify the properties of deep water flowing south through the Denmark Strait. The deep water transport increases by about 30% when the strongest and weakest heat loss events are compared, and there is a corresponding reduction in temperature and salinity by up to 2.3°C and 0.38 psu. We also find significant correlations between deep western basin temperatures at 60°, 55°, and 49°N and the Greenland Sea heat flux anomalies which peak at lags of up to 4 years with the time delay increasing toward more southerly latitudes. Our results suggest that Greenland Sea heat flux variability is a key variable for understanding recent observations of significant interannual variability in Denmark Strait transport characteristics.

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More information

Published date: 19 April 2007
Keywords: Greenland Sea, heat flux, Denmark Strait

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 44070
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/44070
ISSN: 0148-0227
PURE UUID: 94513d84-633d-4de0-bc45-df9c55ffedfe

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Date deposited: 12 Feb 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:00

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Contributors

Author: J.P. Grist
Author: S.A. Josey
Author: B. Sinha

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