Solution of a Model for the Oceanic Pycnocline Depth: Scaling of Overturning Strength and Meridional Pressure Difference
نویسندگان
چکیده
We present an analysis of the model by Gnanadesikan [1999] for the pycnocline depth in the ocean. An analytic solution for the overturning strength as a function of the meridional pressure difference is derived and used to discuss their mutual scaling. We show that scaling occurs only in two unphysical regimes of the model. In the absence of the Southern Ocean (SO) processes, i.e. for a northern overturning cell, the volume transport is proportional to the square root of the pressure difference. Linear scaling is seen when the overturning is restricted entirely to the SO, i.e. when no northern downwelling exists. For comparison, we present simulations with the coupled climate model CLIMBER-3α which show linear scaling over a large regime of pressure differences in the North Atlantic (NA). We conclude that the pycnocline model is not able to reproduce the linear scaling between its two central variables, pressure and volume transport.
منابع مشابه
The Open University ’ s repository of research publications and other research outputs Meridional density gradients do not control the Atlantic overturning circulation
A wide body of modeling and theoretical scaling studies support the concept that changes to the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), whether forced by winds or buoyancy fluxes, can be understood in terms of a simple causative relation between the AMOC and an appropriately defined meridional density gradient (MDG). The MDG is supposed to translate directly into a meridional pressu...
متن کاملpublications and other research outputs Meridional density gradients do not control the Atlantic overturning circulation
A wide body of modeling and theoretical scaling studies support the concept that changes to the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), whether forced by winds or buoyancy fluxes, can be understood in terms of a simple causative relation between the AMOC and an appropriately defined meridional density gradient (MDG). The MDG is supposed to translate directly into a meridional pressu...
متن کاملMeridional Density Gradients Do Not Control the Atlantic Overturning Circulation
A wide body of modeling and theoretical scaling studies support the concept that changes to the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), whether forced by winds or buoyancy fluxes, can be understood in terms of a simple causative relation between the AMOC and an appropriately defined meridional density gradient (MDG). The MDG is supposed to translate directly into a meridional pressu...
متن کاملThe Open University ’ s repository of research publications and other research outputs Meridional density gradients do not control the
A wide body of modeling and theoretical scaling studies support the concept that changes to the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), whether forced by winds or buoyancy fluxes, can be understood in terms of a simple causative relation between the AMOC and an appropriately defined meridional density gradient (MDG). The MDG is supposed to translate directly into a meridional pressu...
متن کاملAtlantic pycnocline theory scrutinized using a coupled climate model
[1] Simulations with changed Southern Ocean wind‐stress, oceanic vertical mixing, surface freshwater forcing and global warming confirm the basic equations of Gnanadesikan’s (1999) theory for the Atlantic: one vertical scale, the pycnocline depth D, contributes inversely proportional to low‐latitudinal upwelling and linearly to Southern Ocean eddy transport. The maximum Atlantic overturning is ...
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