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North Atlantic Eddy-Driven Jet in Interglacial and Glacial Winter Climates

Authors :
Tim Woollings
Niklaus Merz
Christoph C. Raible
Source :
Merz, Niklaus; Raible, Christoph; Woollings, Tim (2015). North Atlantic Eddy-Driven Jet in interglacial and glacial winter climates. Journal of Climate, 28(10), pp. 3977-3997. American Meteorological Society 10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00525.1
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2015.

Abstract

The atmospheric westerly flow in the North Atlantic (NA) sector is dominated by atmospheric waves or eddies generating via momentum flux convergence, the so-called eddy-driven jet. The position of this jet is variable and shows for the present-day winter climate three preferred latitudinal states: a northern, central, and southern position in the NA. Here, the authors analyze the behavior of the eddy-driven jet under different glacial and interglacial boundary conditions using atmosphere–land-only simulations with the CCSM4 climate model. As state-of-the-art climate models tend to underestimate the trimodality of the jet latitude, the authors apply a bias correction and successfully extract the trimodal behavior of the jet within CCSM4. The analysis shows that during interglacial times (i.e., the early Holocene and the Eemian) the preferred jet positions are rather stable and the observed multimodality is the typical interglacial character of the jet. During glacial times, the jet is strongly enhanced, its position is shifted southward, and the trimodal behavior vanishes. This is mainly due to the presence of the Laurentide ice sheet (LIS). The LIS enhances stationary waves downstream, thereby accelerating and displacing the NA eddy-driven jet by anomalous stationary momentum flux convergence. Additionally, changes in the transient eddy activity caused by topography changes as well as other glacial boundary conditions lead to an acceleration of the westerly winds over the southern NA at the expense of more northern areas. Consequently, both stationary and transient eddies foster the southward shift of the NA eddy-driven jet during glacial winter times.

Details

ISSN :
15200442 and 08948755
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Climate
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a8a9ee0bcb124a7d34da4c5551bf9128