Mixing and air–sea buoyancy fluxes set the time-mean overturning circulation in the subpolar North Atlantic and Nordic Seas

dc.contributor.author Evans, Dafydd Gwyn
dc.contributor.author Holliday, N. Penny
dc.contributor.author Bacon, Sheldon
dc.contributor.author Le Bras, Isabela
dc.date.accessioned 2024-02-16T19:23:57Z
dc.date.available 2024-02-16T19:23:57Z
dc.date.issued 2023-06-02
dc.description © The Author(s), 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Evans, D. G., Holliday, N. P., Bacon, S., & Le Bras, I. Mixing and air-sea buoyancy fluxes set the time-mean overturning circulation in the subpolar North Atlantic and Nordic Seas. Ocean Science, 19(3), (2023): 745–768, https://doi.org/10.5194/os-19-745-2023.
dc.description.abstract The overturning streamfunction as measured at the OSNAP (Overturning in the Subpolar North Atlantic Program) mooring array represents the transformation of warm, salty Atlantic Water into cold, fresh North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW). The magnitude of the overturning at the OSNAP array can therefore be linked to the transformation by air–sea buoyancy fluxes and mixing in the region north of the OSNAP array. Here, we estimate these water mass transformations using observational-based, reanalysis-based and model-based datasets. Our results highlight that air–sea fluxes alone cannot account for the time-mean magnitude of the overturning at OSNAP, and therefore a residual mixing-driven transformation is required to explain the difference. A cooling by air–sea heat fluxes and a mixing-driven freshening in the Nordic Seas, Iceland Basin and Irminger Sea precondition the warm, salty Atlantic Water, forming subpolar mode water classes in the subpolar North Atlantic. Mixing in the interior of the Nordic Seas, over the Greenland–Scotland Ridge and along the boundaries of the Irminger Sea and Iceland Basin drive a water mass transformation that leads to the convergence of volume in the water mass classes associated with NADW. Air–sea buoyancy fluxes and mixing therefore play key and complementary roles in setting the magnitude of the overturning within the subpolar North Atlantic and Nordic Seas. This study highlights that, for ocean and climate models to realistically simulate the overturning circulation in the North Atlantic, the small-scale processes that lead to the mixing-driven formation of NADW must be adequately represented within the model's parameterisation scheme.
dc.description.sponsorship Dafydd Gwyn Evans, N. Penny Holliday and Sheldon Bacon were funded under the NERC research grant no. NE/R015953/1. Isabela Le Bras was funded by the NSF grant no. OCE-2038481.
dc.identifier.citation Evans, D. G., Holliday, N. P., Bacon, S., & Le Bras, I. (2023). Mixing and air-sea buoyancy fluxes set the time-mean overturning circulation in the subpolar North Atlantic and Nordic Seas. Ocean Science, 19(3), 745–768.
dc.identifier.doi 10.5194/os-19-745-2023
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/1912/67645
dc.publisher European Geosciences Union
dc.relation.uri https://doi.org/10.5194/os-19-745-2023
dc.rights Attribution 4.0 International *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ *
dc.title Mixing and air–sea buoyancy fluxes set the time-mean overturning circulation in the subpolar North Atlantic and Nordic Seas
dc.type Article
dspace.entity.type Publication
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relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery 697939cb-a62a-4dcc-979b-a7361a795e7a
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