TY - JOUR
T1 - Global Meridional Overturning Circulation Inferred From a Data-Constrained Ocean & Sea-Ice Model
AU - Lee, Sang Ki
AU - Lumpkin, Rick
AU - Baringer, Molly O.
AU - Meinen, Christopher S.
AU - Goes, Marlos
AU - Dong, Shenfu
AU - Lopez, Hosmay
AU - Yeager, Stephen G.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2018. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2019/2/16
Y1 - 2019/2/16
N2 - Our current understanding of the global meridional overturning circulation (GMOC) is revisited using a surface-forced ocean model simulation constrained by global hydrographic data. The derived GMOC is qualitatively consistent with previous observation-based studies and further provides enhanced spatial details in the sources, transformations, and transports of major global water masses including in poorly observed regions. Several important but relatively underexplored aspects of the GMOC are highlighted, including complex but vigorous heavy-to-light water mass transformation that occurs in the Indo-Pacific and Southern Oceans, and the role of the equatorial Pacific upwelling in closing the GMOC circuit. These and other key aspects of the GMOC are poorly captured in a surface-forced ocean model simulation without the temperature and salinity corrections, suggesting that current climate models do not realistically simulate the GMOC and the associated global heat, salt, and carbon balances.
AB - Our current understanding of the global meridional overturning circulation (GMOC) is revisited using a surface-forced ocean model simulation constrained by global hydrographic data. The derived GMOC is qualitatively consistent with previous observation-based studies and further provides enhanced spatial details in the sources, transformations, and transports of major global water masses including in poorly observed regions. Several important but relatively underexplored aspects of the GMOC are highlighted, including complex but vigorous heavy-to-light water mass transformation that occurs in the Indo-Pacific and Southern Oceans, and the role of the equatorial Pacific upwelling in closing the GMOC circuit. These and other key aspects of the GMOC are poorly captured in a surface-forced ocean model simulation without the temperature and salinity corrections, suggesting that current climate models do not realistically simulate the GMOC and the associated global heat, salt, and carbon balances.
KW - Atlantic meridional overturning circulation
KW - global meridional overturning circulation
KW - Indo-Pacific meridional overturning circulation
KW - ocean and sea-ice modeling
KW - robust diagnostic simulation
KW - water mass transformation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85060906077
U2 - 10.1029/2018GL080940
DO - 10.1029/2018GL080940
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85060906077
SN - 0094-8276
VL - 46
SP - 1521
EP - 1530
JO - Geophysical Research Letters
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
IS - 3
ER -