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Creators/Authors contains: "Wienders, Nicolas"

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  1. Abstract Statistical characterization of oceanic flows has been a long standing issue; such information is invaluable for formulating hypotheses and testing them. It also allows us to understand the energy pathways within the ocean, which is highly turbulent. Here, we apply the wavelet approach to wavenumber spectral analysis, which has recently been proved to be beneficial in quantifying the spatially heterogeneous and anisotropic nature of oceanic flows. Utilizing an eddy‐rich ensemble simulation of the North Atlantic, we are able to examine the spectral transfers of eddy kinetic energy (EKE) and effect of potential energy, here defined via dynamic enthalpy, on the EKE spectral budget. We find that vertical advection of EKE modulates the up‐ and down‐scale direction and strength of EKE spectral flux throughout the North Atlantic domain. The vertical eddy buoyancy flux tends to be small below the mixed layer, suggesting that the flow is largely adiabatic. In maintaining this adiabatic nature, the eddy advection of dynamic enthalpy and practical salinity tend to partially compensate for the eddy advection of potential temperature; this partial cancellation between temperature and salinity is similar to the thermodynamic spice variable. 
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  2. Abstract We describe a form of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) variability that we believe has not previously appeared in observations or models. It is found in an ensemble of eddy‐resolving North Atlantic simulations that the AMOC frequently reverses in sign at ∼35°N with gyre‐wide anomalies in size and that reach throughout the water column. The duration of each reversal is roughly 1 month. The reversals are part of the annual AMOC cycle occurring in boreal winter, although not all years feature an actual reversal in sign. The occurrence of the reversals appears in our ensemble mean, suggesting it is a forced feature of the circulation. A partial explanation is found in an Ekman response to wind stress anomalies. Model ensemble simulations run with different combinations of climatological and realistic forcings argue that it is the atmospheric forcing specifically that results in the reversals, despite the signals extending into the deep ocean. 
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