A North Atlantic Ocean-originated mode of the AMOC multicentennial variability

Kunpeng Yang,Haijun Yang, Mengyu Liu

crossref(2024)

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摘要
A multicentennial oscillation (MCO) of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is exhibited in a CESM1 control simulation. It primarily arises from internal oceanic processes in the North Atlantic, potentially representing a North Atlantic Ocean-originated mode of AMOC multicentennial variability (MCV) in reality. Specifically, this AMOC MCO is mainly driven by salinity variation in the subpolar upper North Atlantic, which dominates local density variation. Salinity anomaly in the subpolar upper ocean is enhanced by the well-known positive salinity advection feedback that is realized through anomalous advection in the subtropical-subpolar upper ocean. Meanwhile, mean advection moves salinity anomaly in the subtropical intermediate ocean northward, weakening the subpolar upper salinity anomaly and leading to its phase change. This mechanism aligns with a theoretical model we proposed earlier. In this theoretical model, artificially deactivating either the anomalous or mean advection in the AMOC upper branch prevents it from exhibiting AMOC MCO, underscoring the indispensability of both the anomalous and mean advections in this North Atlantic Ocean-originated AMOC MCO. In our coupled model simulation, the South Atlantic and Southern Ocean do not exhibit variabilities synchronous with the AMOC MCO; the Arctic Ocean’s contribution to the subpolar upper salinity anomaly is much weaker than the North Atlantic. Hence, this North Atlantic Ocean-originated AMOC MCO is distinct from the previously proposed Southern Ocean-originated and Arctic Ocean-originated AMOC MCOs. 
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