AIR-SEA FEEDBACK IN THE NORTH-ATLANTIC AND SURFACE BOUNDARY-CONDITIONS FOR OCEAN MODELS

Citation
C. Frankignoul et al., AIR-SEA FEEDBACK IN THE NORTH-ATLANTIC AND SURFACE BOUNDARY-CONDITIONS FOR OCEAN MODELS, Journal of climate, 11(9), 1998, pp. 2310-2324
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
08948755
Volume
11
Issue
9
Year of publication
1998
Pages
2310 - 2324
Database
ISI
SICI code
0894-8755(1998)11:9<2310:AFITNA>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Extratropical sea surface temperature (SST) and Surface turbulent heat flux monthly anomalies in the central and eastern part of the North A tlantic are considered for the period 1952-92 on a 5 degrees X 5 degre es grid. In this region where the mean surface current is small, the S ST anomalies are:well simulated by a simple one-dimensional mixed laye r model that is stochastically forced by the day-to-day changes in the local air-sea fluxes. A statistical signature of the stochastic model is that the cross correlation between surface heat flux and SST anoma lies changes sign between negative and positive lags when the heat flu x feedback-is negative. This is observed at each grid point of the dom ain for the turbulent heat flux, which thus contributes both to genera ting the midlatitude SST anomalies and to damping them, once they are generated. Using properties of the lag covariance between SST and heat flux anomalies, the turbulent heat Aux feedback is estimated from the observations. It averages to about 20 W m(-2) K-1 in the investigated domain, increasing toward the northwest and the northeast and decreas ing southward. It also varies seasonally, being generally largest in t he fall and smaller and more uniform in summer. There is no indication that it can become significantly positive. A negative turbulent heat flux feedback is also suggested by the lag relation between the domina nt modes of SST and turbulent heat flux variability over the whole Nor th Atlantic, and it is found that the spatial patterns of the associat ed SST and turbulent heat flux anomalies are remarkably similar whethe r the atmosphere leads or lags, with only a change of heat flux sign b etween lead and lag situations. This analysis provides some observatio nal support for the use on short timescales of a restoring condition f ar SST in ocean-only simulations, but the coupling coefficient should be weaker than usually assumed and a function of latitude and season. The associated SST-evaporation feedback has little effect on interannu al surface salinity changes. It should be significant on longer timesc ales, but then the restoring temperature should be allowed to vary and nonlocal influences should be considered.