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The Influence of Local and Remote Processeson Air-Sea Interaction overWestern Boundary Current Regionsby Michael Alexander
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Mike is interested in the atmospheric and oceanic processes that lead to SST variability in WBC regions and how the SST anomalies feedback on the atmosphere. Local processes that impact SST variability in the Kuroshio and Gulf Stream regions include surface fluxes and the “reemergence mechanism” (e.g. Alexander and Deser 1995). In the latter, temperature anomalies created by surface fluxes are spread by turbulence over the deep winter mixed layer. After the mixed layer abruptly shoals in spring, the anomalies are stored in the seasonal thermocline during summer, when surface fluxes damp the concurrent SST anomalies. The thermal anomalies are then re-entrained into the mixed layer when it again deepens in the following fall and winter. The reemergence process enhances the winter-to-winter persistence of SST anomalies (Deser et al. 2002; Park et al. 2006) and can impact the atmospheric circulation when the thermal anomalies return to the surface in the following winter (Cassou et al. 2007 and Liu et al. 2007). Variability in the Kuroshio and Gulf Stream regions are influenced by
remote air-sea interactions in other parts of the extratropics. Fluctuations
in wind stress curl over the central North Pacific and North Atlantic
generate oceanic Rossby waves that impact thermocline depth and the strength
of the WBCs 3-7 years later. The resulting changes in the strength and
position of the WBCs affect the SSTs, alter the surface heat fluxes,
and thereby feedback on the atmospheric circulation. This coupled atmosphere-ocean
interaction appears to generate decadal oscillations over the North Pacific
in the NCAR coupled climate model (Alexander et al. 2006, Kwon and Deser
2007).
References: Alexander, M. A. and C. Deser 1995:A mechanism for the recurrence of midlatitude SST anomalies during winter. J. Phys. Oceanogr., 25, 122-137. Alexander, M. A., N.-C. Lau, and J. D. Scott, 2004: Broadening the atmospheric bridge paradigm: ENSO teleconnections to the North Pacific in summer and to the tropical west Pacific- Indian Oceans over the seasonal cycle. Earth Climate: The Ocean-Atmosphere Interaction. Eds. C. Wang, S.-P. Xie and J. Carton. AGU Monograph. pp. 85-104. Alexander, M., J. Yin, G. Branstator, A. Capotondi, C. Cassou, R. Cullather, Y.-O. Kwon, J Norris, J. Scott, I. Wainer, 2006. Extratropical Atmosphere-Ocean Variability in CCSM3. J. Climate, 19, 2496-2525. Cassou, C., C. Deser and M. A. Alexander, 2007: Investigating the impact of reemerging sea surface temperature anomalies on the winter atmospheric circulation over the North Atlantic. J. Climate, in press. Deser, C., M. A. Alexander, and M. S. Timlin, 2002: On the persistence of sea surface temperature anomalies in midlatitudes. J. Climate, 16, 16, 57-72. Kwon, Y.-O., and C. Deser, 2007: North Pacific Decadal Variability in the Community Climate System Model Version 2. J. Climate, in press. Liu, Z., Y. Liu, L. Wu., and R. Jacob, 2007: Seasonal and longtem atmospheric responses to reemerging North Pacific Ocean Varaibility: A combined dynamical and statistical assessment. J. Climate, in press. Park, S., M. A. Alexander, and C. Deser, 2006: The impact of cloud radiative feedback, remote ENSO forcing, and entrainment on the persistence of North Pacific sea surface temperature anomalies. J. Climate 19, 6243-6261. Peng, S., W.A. Robinson, S. Li, and M.A. Alexander, 2006: Effects of Ekman transport on the NAO response to a tropical Atlantic SST anomaly. J. Climate, 19, 4803-4818. Peng, S., W.A. Robinson, S. Li, and M.P. Hoerling, 2005: Tropical Atlantic SST forcing of coupled North Atlantic seasonal responses. J. Climate, 18, 480-496.
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