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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-04-18
    Description: Visible results were obtained by the working groups in Kiel on the first four aspects of the project, resulting in improvements of the quantitative knowledge of key processes and key regions in the Atlantic Ocean. New ocean and coupled ocean-atmosphere models were analyzed with regard to seasonal and decadal climate changes, as well as optimization techniques. In addition, the influence of circulation variability on oceanic CO2 uptake was investigated. Intense field studies were carried out successfully in two regions: The measurements obtained in the equatorial Atlantic serve as the basis for a better understanding of the role of the tropical Atlantic for climate fluctuations in the Atlantic in general, and also provide predictability indicators for seasonal forecasts. The second focal area of field work was the southern region of the Labrador Sea near 53°N where different components of the North Atlantic Deep Water merge to form the deep western boundary current (DWBC). Here a mooring array has been deployed for the past 13 years to monitor this branch of the thermohaline circulation exiting the Labrador Sea. In collaboration with other national and international large-scale observations (ship-based measurements, Argo floats, etc.) and modeling efforts, the field work carried out by the Kiel working groups provides a significant contribution toward a sustainable regional ocean-climate analysis system.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: We revisit the challenges and prospects for ocean circulation models following Griffies et al. (2010). Over the past decade, ocean circulation models evolved through improved understanding, numerics, spatial discretization, grid configurations, parameterizations, data assimilation, environmental monitoring, and process-level observations and modeling. Important large scale applications over the last decade are simulations of the Southern Ocean, the Meridional Overturning Circulation and its variability, and regional sea level change. Submesoscale variability is now routinely resolved in process models and permitted in a few global models, and submesoscale effects are parameterized in most global models. The scales where nonhydrostatic effects become important are beginning to be resolved in regional and process models. Coupling to sea ice, ice shelves, and high-resolution atmospheric models has stimulated new ideas and driven improvements in numerics. Observations have provided insight into turbulence and mixing around the globe and its consequences are assessed through perturbed physics models. Relatedly, parameterizations of the mixing and overturning processes in boundary layers and the ocean interior have improved. New diagnostics being used for evaluating models alongside present and novel observations are briefly referenced. The overall goal is summarizing new developments in ocean modeling, including: how new and existing observations can be used, what modeling challenges remain, and how simulations can be used to support observations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
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    American Meteorological Society
    In:  EPIC3Journal of Physical Oceanography, American Meteorological Society, 44(8), pp. 2093-2106, ISSN: 0022-3670
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The recently proposed Internal Wave Dissipation, Energy and Mixing (IDEMIX) model, describing the propagation and dissipation of internal gravity waves in the ocean, is extended. Compartments describing the energy contained in the internal tides and the near-inertial waves at low, vertical wavenumber are added to a compartment of the wave continuum at higher wavenumbers. Conservation equations for each compartment are derived based on integrated versions of the radiative transfer equation of weakly interacting waves. The compartments interact with each other by the scattering of tidal energy to the wave continuum by triad wave– wave interactions, which are strongly enhanced equatorward of 288 due to parametric subharmonic instability of the tide and by scattering to the continuum of both tidal and near-inertial wave energy over rough topography and at continental margins. Global numerical simulations of the resulting model using observed stratification, forcing functions, and bottom topography yield good agreement with available observations.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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