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MOC related activities at NOC Joël Hirschi, Elaine McDonagh, Brian King, Gerard McCarthy Stuart Cunningham, Harry Bryden, Adam Blaker SAMOC workshop, Rio de Janeiro 11 th – 13 th May 2010
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Outline Some thoughts about SAMOC Hydrography in the South Atlantic Imprints of eddies and internal waves on MOC
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Thoughts about SAMOC What is the added value of having an observing system in the South Atlantic? How and where should we make measurements?
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What value can SAMOC add? Heat budget in tropical Atlantic Lead/lag relationship between heat fluxes at 26/32°S, 26°N and the development of anomalous heat content/SSTs Better understanding of southern vs northern influences on Atlantic MOC
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Heat budget of tropical Atlantic?
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MOC anomalies: April 2004 – April 2008 MOC anomalies: deseasoned, 2-month running average
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Lag correlation between MOC anomalies and SSTs: MOC leads SSTs by 6 months Influence on North Atlantic Storm Track Origin of North Atlantic Hurricanes
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Hydrography in the South Atlantic Focus on Repeat Zonal Hydrography in the Subtropics At 24ºS –2009: JC032 –1983: OC133 –1958: IGY Section At 30ºS –2003 & 1993
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Changes at 30ºS: 2003 - 1993 Max. Anom at 13ºC in Eastern Basin Salinification of Thermocline and Intermediate Water in the East
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Interannual Variability at 30ºS Salinity Anomalies with large temporal amplitude are seen in the Eastern Basin – peak to trough comparable with cruise changes Salinity anomalies appear to propagate westwards with speeds of ~ 5cm/s recalling anomalies seen highlighted by Biastoch (2008) in satellite and model data
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Salinity Anomalies with large temporal amplitude are seen in the Eastern Basin – peak to trough comparable with cruise changes Raw Argo salinity on 13ºC F S F Interannual Variability at 30ºS
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Salinity Anomalies with large temporal amplitude are seen in the Eastern Basin – peak to trough comparable with cruise changes Salinity anomalies appear to propagate westwards with speeds of ~ 5cm/s recalling anomalies seen highlighted by Biastoch (2008) in satellite and model data Interannual Variability at 30ºS
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Salinity Anomalies with large temporal amplitude are seen in the Eastern Basin – peak to trough comparable with cruise changes Salinity anomalies appear to propagate westwards with speeds of ~ 5cm/s recalling anomalies seen highlighted by Biastoch (2008) in satellite and model data Interannual Variability at 30ºS
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Imprint of eddies and internal waves on MOC
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NEMO (Nucleus of European Modelling of the Ocean) NEMO ¼° global 1958 to 2001 run 64 Vertical levels 6-hourly forcing for wind, heat and freshwater fluxes Madec (2008) http://www.nemo-ocean.eu
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Two passes through 1958 to 2001 forcing: Influence of initial conditions Pass 1 Pass 2 Atlantic MOC at 26°S at 1000 m depth
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Red: pass 2 Blue: pass 1 Atlantic MOC 1100 m depth: 26N
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MOC in 1/4° NEMO spinup: mean MOC 1976-2001 [Sv]
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Standard deviation of MOC 1976-2001 (5-day averages) Sv
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Snapshots of sea surface height in passes 1 and 2 Pass 1, 21-25/12/1980Pass 2, 21-25/12/1980 m
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SSH difference between passes 2 and 1 [m]
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Std. dev.of MOC variability due to eddies & waves Sv
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Ratio between chaotic and total MOC variability
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Importance to clearly define benefits of SAMOC Hydrographic measurements at 30°S suggest large interannual variability – difficult to detect trends Imprint of eddies and internal waves varies from 1-2 Sv std.dev. (Tropics to mid-latitudes) to more than 5 Sv std.dev. at the equator Model results suggest similar “chaotic” variability at 25°S and 32°S Inferred “chaotic” variability likely to be a lower limit as eddies are likely to be too “predictable” in ¼° model Conclusions
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