Sustained ocean measurements at 34°S crucial for estimating the distance to an AMOC collapse
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2M ago
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) transports warm and salty upper ocean water to the subpolar North Atlantic where the upper ocean releases some heat to the atmosphere. Due to the surface cooling and the high salinity (i.e., salty), the upper ocean water becomes heavier and thus sinks down to the deep ocean and then ..read more
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How did excessive Labrador Sea convection in the 1990s increase the AMOC?
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
9M ago
The Overturning in the Subpolar North Atlantic Program (OSNAP) observing system, which was launched in the summer of 2014 comprises an integrated coast-to-coast array of two sections: OSNAP West, extending from the southeastern Labrador shelf to the southwestern tip of Greenland, and OSNAP East, extending from the southeastern tip of Greenland to the Scottish shelf ..read more
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Is the AMOC shutting down soon?
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
9M ago
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is the Atlantic component of the global ocean conveyor belt, which is a large-scale ocean circulation system that connects the Arctic, Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans via the Southern Ocean. Predominantly driven by deep convection in the high-latitude North Atlantic Ocean, the AMOC carries heat, salt, carbon, and other ..read more
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Nearshore sea ice shield Antarctic ice shelves from damaging ocean waves
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2y ago
The Larsen ice shelves extend along the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula over the northwest part of the Weddell Sea. From north to south, these segments are called the Larsen A, B, C, and D, bordered by Filchner–Ronne Ice Shelf south of the Weddell Sea. In 1995, the Larsen A ice shelf completely disintegrated ..read more
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North Atlantic zonal winds will shift northward and become more extreme in the future
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2y ago
The warming response of the upper atmosphere is much stronger in the tropics due to higher water vapor content and frequent deep tropical convection that maintains the atmosphere column well-mixed. As a result, the zonal jet strength, which is largely proportional to the meridional gradient of atmosphere temperature via "thermal wind relationship" is projected to ..read more
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Why climate models are unable to reproduce the observed Antarctic sea-ice expansion
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2y ago
Antarctic sea-ice has expanded over the period of continuous satellite monitoring, which seemingly contradicts ongoing global warming resulting from increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases. A variety of hypotheses have been proposed to explain the observed Antarctic sea-ice expansion and corresponding model–observation discrepancy, but the issue remains unresolved. In a new study published in Nature Climate ..read more
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Sea-ice retreat may invigorate the weakening Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2y ago
Due to rapidly rising air temperature over the Arctic and subarctic regions, the ocean-to-air turbulent (i.e., sensible and latent) heat flux over the Greenland, Iceland, and Norwegian Seas (GINS) has diminished (i.e., less cooling of the surface ocean) steadily during the satellite period (i.e., since the 1970s). This may lead to a reduction of deep ..read more
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Future El Niño events will develop faster and persist longer
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2y ago
Previous studies based on the climate models participating in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) have suggested an increase in the frequency of extreme El Niño events in the 21st Century in response to increasing greenhouse gases. Several studies have attributed these shifts in El Niño frequency and amplitude to the projected changes in the ..read more
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New aircraft-based observations confirm the role of the Southern Ocean as a significant carbon sink
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2y ago
Ship-based CO2 flux estimates of the contemporary air-sea flux of CO2 showed that the Southern Ocean (south of 35oS) plays an important role as a significant carbon sink, with a net uptake at the rate of −0.8 ~ −1.0 Pg C/year (Takahashi et al., 2009; Landschützer et al., 2014) largely consistent with climate model-based estimates ..read more
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Increasing river alkalinity slows ocean acidification in river-dominated ocean margins
Ocean to Climate | Global warming
by sklee621
2y ago
Although ocean acidification (OA) is mainly driven by the ocean uptake of anthropogenic carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, multiple factors including changes in ocean temperature, biological processes, and river discharge influence its temporal progression. In a new paper accepted in the Geophysical Research Letters, a team of researchers from the Northern Gulf Institute of the ..read more
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