Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10119628 | Dynamics of Atmospheres and Oceans | 2005 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
The oceanic response to an abrupt change in diabatic forcing, a sudden increase in heat loss in high latitudes say, is characterized by two time-scales. The one, Ïw, is relatively short and is associated with planetary and coastal waves that propagate from the disturbed region to the equator (and then back to higher latitudes.) The other, Ïd, is on the order of a few years and depends on diabatic processes responsible for increasing the oceanic heat gain in low latitudes. Through these processes the system is driven towards a new balanced heat budget in which the heat gain, mainly in the equatorial upwelling zones, equals the heat loss in high latitudes. When the forcing, rather than abrupt, is sinusoidal with period P, then the amplitude of the response depends on the ratio P/Ïd. The response is modest when that ratio is small because the period P is too short for the ocean to adjust. As P gets larger compared to Ïd, the amplitude increases, but explicit evidence of the waves that connect high and low latitudes is very hard to detect. The ocean acts as a low pass filter to the forcing with characteristic timescale Ïd.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Giulio Boccaletti, Ronald C. Pacanowski, S. George, H. Philander,