Abstract The ocean’s role in Atlantic Multidecadal Variability (AMV) remains intensely debated. The core issue is whether AMV, as an internal climate mode, is driven by variations in Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) or by atmospheric processes. Climate models exhibit wide diversity in AMOC-AMV linkages, producing temporal correlations between 0.3-0.8, but no robust explanation for these differences exists. Here, using multi-model intercomparison and perturbation experiments, we propose a dynamical mechanism relating the strength of AMOC-AMV linkage in climate models to stratospheric temperature. This mechanism includes (1) tropospheric midlatitude jet response to stratospheric mean-state temperature anomalies in mid-latitudes and (2) resulting ocean surface density changes that alter the spatial structure of deep-water formation in the subpolar North Atlantic and hence AMOC-AMV connection. Specifically, colder stratospheric temperatures produce tighter linkage through the northward jet shifts and a stronger AMOC, with enhanced deep-water formation in the Labrador and Irminger Seas relative to the Nordic Seas. Models with a warm stratospheric bias tend to produce weaker linkage. Perturbation experiments imposing stratospheric cooling at mid to high latitudes within two independent climate models support these conclusions. Furthermore, we find that models with stronger AMOC-AMV linkage predict a stronger North Atlantic “warming hole” and weaker 21st-century Arctic amplification. We conclude that these results have significant implications for climate prediction and projections.
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Large diversity in AMOC internal variability across NEMO-based climate models
Abstract We characterise, and explore the drivers of, differences in the internal variability of the atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) across five NEMO-based CMIP6 class climate models. While the variability of AMOC variability is dominated by its lower dense limb in all models, there is large diversity in the timescale, multidecadal variability, and latitudinal coherence of AMOC across models. In particular, the UK models have much weaker AMOC multidecadal variability and latitudinal coherence. The model diversity is associated with differences in salinity-governed surface density variations which drive high-density water mass transformation (WMT) in the Greenland–Iceland–Norwegian Seas (GIN) and the Arctic. Specifically, GIN Seas WMT shows large multidecadal variability which has a major impact on AMOC variability in non-UK models. In contrast, the smaller variability in GIN Seas WMT in the UK models has limited impact on the lower latitude AMOC via the Denmark strait overflow mass transport. This leads to a latitudinally less coherent and weaker multidecadal variability of the AMOC lower limb. Such differences between UK and non-UK models are related to differences in model mean states and densification processes in the Arctic and GIN Seas. Consequently, we recommend further in-depth studies to better understand and constrain processes driving salinity changes in the Arctic and GIN Seas for more reliable representation of the AMOC in climate models.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2040020
- PAR ID:
- 10567313
- Publisher / Repository:
- Springer Nature
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Climate Dynamics
- Volume:
- 62
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 0930-7575
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 3355 to 3374
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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