| Literature DB >> 32055436 |
S G Yeager1, J I Robson2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Recent Atlantic climate prediction studies are an exciting new contribution to an extensive body of research on Atlantic decadal variability and predictability that has long emphasized the unique role of the Atlantic Ocean in modulating the surface climate. We present a survey of the foundations and frontiers in our understanding of Atlantic variability mechanisms, the role of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), and our present capacity for putting that understanding into practice in actual climate prediction systems. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: AMOC; Atlantic multi-decadal variability; Climate prediction; Decadal prediction; Subpolar gyre; Thermohaline circulation
Year: 2017 PMID: 32055436 PMCID: PMC6991968 DOI: 10.1007/s40641-017-0064-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Clim Change Rep
Fig. 1Modified from [96•]. a Annual rate of surface formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW; σ0 > 27.6 kg m−3) over the high-latitude North Atlantic (60° W–20° E; 50° N–90° N) diagnosed from observed atmospheric and oceanic surface fields (thick green curve, left axis) and the observed winter (December–March) NAO index (thin blue curve, right axis). The remaining panels show 3-year running mean anomalies from a forced ocean-sea-ice simulation (CORE; black curves), CESM initialized decadal predictions averaged over the 5–7-year forecast period (DP; red curves and shading are ensemble mean and minimum/maximum range, respectively), CESM uninitialized twentieth century simulations (20C; purple dashed curves show the mean of a 6-member ensemble), and various observational time series (OBS; blue curves). Apart from the winter NAO in Fig. 1a, all time series are based on annual mean data. b Upper 1050 m density anomaly (σ0) in the central Labrador Sea region (56° W–49° W; 56° N–61° N). c Upper 1050 m density anomaly (σ0) in a region to the east of Grand Banks (50° W–35° W; 40° N–50° N). d Barotropic gyre streamfunction anomaly averaged over the Grand Banks region (note inverted axis; more negative values indicate stronger cyclonic circulation). e Ocean poleward heat transport across 50° N in the Atlantic. f SST in the subpolar North Atlantic (SPNA; 45° W–10° W; 50° N–60° N). See [96•] for further details