Publication | Closed Access
Atmospheric Blocking and Atlantic Multi-Decadal Ocean Variability
175
Citations
35
References
2011
Year
Unknown Venue
ClimatologyMeteorologyMarine MeteorologyEngineeringPhysical OceanographyAtmospheric ScienceFrequent BlockingGeographyAtmospheric BlockingOceanic ForcingOceanographyCryosphereOcean CirculationClimate ChangeClimate SystemEarth ScienceClimate DynamicsClimate Variability
Based on the 20th century atmospheric reanalysis, winters with more frequent blocking, in a band of blocked latitudes from Greenland to Western Europe, are found to persist over several decades and correspond to a warm North Atlantic Ocean, in-phase with Atlantic multi-decadal ocean variability. Atmospheric blocking over the northern North Atlantic, which involves isolation of large regions of air from the westerly circulation for 5 days or more, influences fundamentally the ocean circulation and upper ocean properties by impacting wind patterns. Winters with clusters of more frequent blocking between Greenland and western Europe correspond to a warmer, more saline subpolar ocean. The correspondence between blocked westerly winds and warm ocean holds in recent decadal episodes (especially, 1996-2010). It also describes much longer-timescale Atlantic multidecadal ocean variability (AMV), including the extreme, pre-greenhouse-gas, northern warming of the 1930s-1960s. The space-time structure of the wind forcing associated with a blocked regime leads to weaker ocean gyres and weaker heat-exchange, both of which contribute to the warm phase of AMV.
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