Johann Jungclaus K. Lohmann, and D. Zanchettin
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Enhanced 20th century heat transfer to the Arctic simulated in the context of
climate variations over the last millennium
Johann JungclausK. Lohmann, and D. Zanchettin
Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg
NACLIM Meeting 2014
NACLIM CT1 investigates mechanisms of variability in the North Atlantic/Arctic region.Extended Earth System Model simulations help to:
• relate recent changes to long-term variations on the millennial time-scale
• discriminate between internally-generated and externally forced variations and between natural and anthropogenic
drivers
• relate spatially sparsely sampled reconstructions to regional and large-scale dynamics in atmosphere and ocean
• test hypothesis in models
Putting recent changes in the context of long-term climate evolution
Atlantic water advection into the Arctic
Foraminiferal data and inferred surface water masses in Fram Strait and Voering Plateu (Dylmer et al., 2013)
Foraminiferal data and temperature of upper Atlantic Water in Fram Strait (Spielhagen et al., 2011)
20th century temperature observations in two Svalbard fjords (Pavlov et al., 2011)
2000 CE
1920 CE 2000 CE
0 CE 2000 CE 0 CE
SPG variability over the last millennium
Miettinen et al., 2012
RAPID 21-COM CR948-1911
• Simulations and proxy-records underline important role of SPG dynamics also for the MWP-LIA transition
Coupled CMIP5-class Earth system model MPI-ESMAtmosphere: ECHAM6 in T63L47 resolution (1.8° horizontal resolution, stratosphere-resolving)Ocean: MPIOM GR1.5L40 (25-200 km horizontal resolution)
“Past1000” (850-1849 CE) simulation following PMIP protocol (Schmidt et al., 2011): 3 realizations“historical” simulations following CMIP5 protocol: 6 realizations“PiCtrl” unforced control simulation over 1000 years
The model system: MPI-ESM
Hor. R
esolution (km)
Jungclaus et al., 2008, 2013
Resolution of the ocean model in the Nordic Seas
Arctic climate in last millennium simulationsArctic summer temperature anomalies w.r.t.1961-1990
Arctic sea-ice extent anomalies w.r.t.850-1849 mean
Kaufman et al., 2009
Colored lines: MPI-ESM simulations
Arctic2K
Shi et al., 2012
Kinnard et al., 2011
Present day minimum
Fram Strait Atl. Water temp in MPI-ESM-P past1000
AW core temp at 78°N, 50m depth (anomaly wrt. preindustrial mean)
SpielhagenSIMMAX
SpielhagenMg/Ca
Colors: MPI-ESM-P past1000 r1,2,3
Atl. water transport into the Arctic model heat transport to Arctic
• Temperature fluctuation in Fram Strait are associated with pronounced heat transport variations into the Arctic.
• Mean heat transport ca. 80 TW, 20th change is about 40%• 30 TW heat input means ca. 2 Wm-2 forcing over the Arctic region
Colors: MPI-ESM-P: past1000 r1,2,3; black: ensemble mean
total moc gyre
model heat transport @65N
Atl. water transport into the Nordic Seas
• Modulation of heat transport variations mainly due to changes in gyre heat transport.
• 20th century stands out by strong increase both in gyre and overturning heat transport.
• However, AMOC at 30°N is weakening over 20th century!
What happens in the 20th century? Trends in total heat transport (TW/100yr)
• Changes in oceanic heat transport are significantly larger than internal variability mainly in the sub polar North Atlantic
• Can these changes be explained by variations in the wind forcing (Sedlaček and Mysak, 2009; Häkkinen and Rhines, 2010)?
5-95%-range for 100-yr trends from control run
What happens in the 20th century?
Changes in wind stress curl are less coherent in the North Atlantic compared to the southern Hemisphere and stay within internal variability range
Trends in zonally averaged wind-stress curl (10-9 Nm-3/100yr)
Trends in gyre (blue), moc (red), and total (black) meridional heat transport in the Atlantic for three simulations
HTR MOC
HTR GYRE
HTR TOTAL
What happens in the 20th century?
• Increase in gyre component overcompenstes reduction in MOC-related heat transport from ca. 50°N
• Divergence of total heat transport suggests cooling in the SPG region and warming north of 60°N
What happens in the 20th century? Trends in overturning circulation (left) and barotropic streamfunction (right)
Contours: pre-industrial mean state, shading: trend in Sv/100yr
• Large-scale changes both in horizontal circulation and overturning: strengthening of the Sub Polar Gyre and of the overturning cell in the Nordic Seas; weakening of the AMOC south of 60°N.
• Redistribution of heat-transport convergence and cooling of the SPG region and warming of the Nordic Seas/Arctic
What happens in the 20th century? Model simulated trend 1905-2005
• No record of AMOC is avialable for the 20th century, neither for SPG strength
• One indication, that the proposed mechanism may have been at work, is the apparent cooling of the sub-polar North Atlantic over the 20th century in the observational datasets (see also Drijfhout et al., GRL, 2012)
EOF1~24%
EOF2~15%
EOF3~9%
SPG variability over the last millenniumEOFs of barotropic stream function(annual data)
Time series of PC3 (red) and gyre heat transport @55°N (blue) (31-yr running mean)
Note: EOF1: “Intergyre –mode”, associated with NAOEOF2: Subpolar-subtropical gyre mode, associated with EAPEOF3 ?
•Model simulations show pronounced variations in ocean heat transport into the Arctic and associated changes in the Atlantic Water temperature in Fram Strait
•Simulations confirm magnitude of 20th warming and the unprecedented character of these changes in the context of the last millennium
•Increasing heat transfer in 20th century can be related to large-scale trends in the overturning and gyre circulation in the sub polar North Atlantic, probably as a result of
global warming; local changes in wind stress (curl) appear less important
•Modulation in northward heat transfer also important over pre-industrial times, but role of external forcing (solar,
volcanic..) is unclear
•Need of ensemble simulations and single-forcing experiments
Summary and conclusions
•The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union 7th Framework Programme (FP7 2007-2013), under grant agreement n.308299
•NACLIM www.naclim.eu