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  • 1
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Physical Oceanography, 31 . pp. 5-29.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-06
    Description: Meridional transports of mass, heat, nutrients, and carbon across coast-to-coast WOCE and pre-WOCE sections between 11°S and 45°S in the South Atlantic are calculated using an inverse model. Usually salt preservation is used as a condition in the inverse model, and only in the case of heat transport the condition of zero total mass transport is taken instead. Other constraints include silica conservation, prescribed southward fluxes of salt and phosphate, and transports in the southward Brazil Current and in the northward Antarctic Bottom Water flow obtained from WOCE moored current meter arrays. The constraints set the underdetermined system of linear equations of the inverse model whose solutions depend on weights, scales, and matrix ranks. The discussion emphasizes the sensitivity of the fluxes to changes in the model input. The transports given in the following are obtained as the means of “reasonable” solutions at 30°S. The error numbers in parentheses include uncertainties due to wind stress and temporal variability, the numbers without parentheses do not contain these terms:0.53 ± 0.03 (0.09) Tg s−1 mass to the south, 0.29 ± 0.05 (0.24) PW heat to the north, 15 ± 120 (500) kmol s−1 oxygen to the south, 121 ± 22 (75) kmol s−1 nitrate to the south, 64 ± 110 (300) silica to the north, and 1997 ± 215 (600) kmol s−1 dissolved inorganic carbon to the south. The above errors in transports are obviously dominated by uncertainties in wind stress and temporal variability. The divergence in meridional heat and mass transport is consistent with integral surface flux changes between corresponding zonal bands. The mass compensation of southward flowing North Atlantic Deep Water occurs to a greater extent in the warm surface waters than in the Antarctic Intermediate Water below. If one follows the arguments of earlier authors on the relation between meridional fluxes and the significance of the two possible pathways for the global thermohaline circulation, the warm water path south of Africa seems to be somewhat more important than the cold water path through Drake Passage.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-12-01
    Description: Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2022. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 103(6), (2022): E1502-E1521, https://doi.org/10.1175/bams-d-21-0227.1.
    Description: Climate observations inform about the past and present state of the climate system. They underpin climate science, feed into policies for adaptation and mitigation, and increase awareness of the impacts of climate change. The Global Climate Observing System (GCOS), a body of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), assesses the maturity of the required observing system and gives guidance for its development. The Essential Climate Variables (ECVs) are central to GCOS, and the global community must monitor them with the highest standards in the form of Climate Data Records (CDR). Today, a single ECV—the sea ice ECV—encapsulates all aspects of the sea ice environment. In the early 1990s it was a single variable (sea ice concentration) but is today an umbrella for four variables (adding thickness, edge/extent, and drift). In this contribution, we argue that GCOS should from now on consider a set of seven ECVs (sea ice concentration, thickness, snow depth, surface temperature, surface albedo, age, and drift). These seven ECVs are critical and cost effective to monitor with existing satellite Earth observation capability. We advise against placing these new variables under the umbrella of the single sea ice ECV. To start a set of distinct ECVs is indeed critical to avoid adding to the suboptimal situation we experience today and to reconcile the sea ice variables with the practice in other ECV domains.
    Description: PH’s contribution was funded under the Australian Government’s Antarctic Science Collaboration Initiative program, and contributes to Project 6 of the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership (ASCI000002). PH acknowledges support through the Australian Antarctic Science Projects 4496 and 4506, and the International Space Science Institute (Bern, Switzerland) project #405.
    Description: 2022-12-01
    Keywords: Sea ice ; Climate change ; Climatology ; Climate records
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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