On the mechanisms behind decadal heat content changes in the eastern subpolar gyre

Type Article
Date 2015-03
Language English
Author(s) Desbruyeres DamienORCID1, Mercier HerleORCID1, Thierry VirginieORCID2
Affiliation(s) 1 : CNRS, UBO, IRD, IFREMER,Lab Phys Oceans,UMR6523, Plouzane, France.
2 : IFREMER, CNRS, UBO, IRD,Lab Phys Oceans,UMR6523, Plouzane, France.
Source Progress In Oceanography (0079-6611) (Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd), 2015-03 , Vol. 132 , P. 262-272
DOI 10.1016/j.pocean.2014.02.005
WOS© Times Cited 22
Note In : Oceanography of the Arctic and North Atlantic Basins
Abstract Historical and modern hydrographic data show substantial decadal variability in the heat content (HC) of the eastern subpolar North Atlantic. Those changes are here investigated in an eddy-permitting simulation (ORCA025-G70) forced by reanalysis products for the period 1965-2004. The observed and simulated decadal signal is characterized by a strong cooling in the 1960’s and 1970’s, a period of minor changes in the 1980’s, and a strong warming in the 1990’s and 2000’s. A heat budget calculation is performed within a box bounded by the Greenland-Scotland sills and the Cape Farewell (Greenland)-Portugal A25-Ovide section. The decadal variability of HC is mainly governed by the integrated effect of anomalous oceanic heat transport across A25-Ovide (HTA25HTA25), with local air-sea heat fluxes playing a damping role. The impact of temperature changes acting upon the mean oceanic circulation is shown to dominate the long-term behavior of HTA25HTA25. Through Lagrangian experiments, we show that temperature anomalies advected by the mean circulation across A25-Ovide are mostly created by the gyre circulation anomalies upstream of A25-Ovide and the associated changes in the relative proportion of cold subpolar and warm subtropical waters feeding the northern and southern branches of the North Atlantic Current. These temperature anomalies induce large-scale changes in the pycnocline slope east of Reykjanes Ridge along A25-Ovide: when the NAC is relatively cold (warm), the main pycnocline moves upward (downward) in the Iceland Basin and on top of Reykjanes Ridge, thereby increasing (decreasing) the pycnocline slope. The resulting velocity anomalies lead to heat transport changes that strongly oppose the thermally-driven heat transport anomalies.
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