South Atlantic meridional transports from NEMO-based simulations and reanalyses
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Published:2018-02-01
Issue:1
Volume:14
Page:53-68
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ISSN:1812-0792
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Container-title:Ocean Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Ocean Sci.
Author:
Mignac Davi, Ferreira DavidORCID, Haines Keith
Abstract
Abstract. The meridional heat transport (MHT) of the South Atlantic plays a key role
in the global heat budget: it is the only equatorward basin-scale ocean heat
transport and it sets the northward direction of the global cross-equatorial
transport. Its strength and variability, however, are not well known. The
South Atlantic transports are evaluated for four state-of-the-art global
ocean reanalyses (ORAs) and two free-running models (FRMs) in the period
1997–2010. All products employ the Nucleus for European Modelling of the
Oceans (NEMO) model, and the ORAs share very similar configurations. Very few
previous works have looked at ocean circulation patterns in reanalysis
products, but here we show that the ORA basin interior transports are
consistently improved by the assimilated in situ and satellite observations
relative to the FRMs, especially in the Argo period. The ORAs also exhibit
systematically higher meridional transports than the FRMs, which is in closer
agreement with observational estimates at 35 and 11∘ S. However, the data
assimilation impact on the meridional transports still
greatly varies among the ORAs, leading to differences up to
∼ 8 Sv and 0.4 PW in the South Atlantic Meridional Overturning
Circulation and the MHTs, respectively. We narrow this down to large
inter-product discrepancies in the western boundary currents (WBCs) at both
upper and deep levels explaining up to ∼ 85 % of the
inter-product differences in MHT. We show that meridional velocity
differences, rather than temperature differences, in the WBCs drive
∼ 83 % of this MHT spread. These findings show that the
present ocean observation network and data assimilation schemes can be used
to consistently constrain the South Atlantic interior circulation but not
the overturning component, which is dominated by the narrow western boundary
currents. This will likely limit the effectiveness of ORA products for
climate or decadal prediction studies.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy
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