January 13, 2023
Journal Article

The Role of Ocean Circulation in Southern Ocean Heat Uptake, Transport and Storage Response to Quadrupled CO2

Abstract

In response to quadrupled CO2, the Southern Ocean primarily uptakes excess heat around 60°S, which is then redistributed by the northward ocean heat transport (OHT) and mostly stored in the ocean or released back to the atmosphere around 45°S. However, the relative roles of mean ocean circulation and ocean circulation change in the uptake and redistribution of heat in the Southern Ocean remain controversial. Here, a set of climate model experiments embedded with a newly developed partially coupling technique are used to separate the roles of mean ocean circulation (passive component) and ocean circulation change (active component). For the ocean heat uptake (OHU) response, the mean ocean circulation and ocean circulation change are of equal importance. The OHT response south of 50°S is mainly determined by mean ocean circulation, while the ocean circulation change generates an anomalous southward OHT north of 50°S. A heat budget analysis finds that the divergence (convergence) of passive (active) OHT acts to balance the passive (active) surface heat gain (loss) to the south (north) of ~50°S. Intriguingly, all the increase in ocean heat storage (OHS) is attributable to the passive component, with the ocean circulation change playing almost no role.

Published: January 13, 2023

Citation

Li Q., Y. Luo, J. Lu, and F. Liu. 2022. The Role of Ocean Circulation in Southern Ocean Heat Uptake, Transport and Storage Response to Quadrupled CO2. Journal of Climate 35, no. 22:7165–7182. PNNL-SA-171138. doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-22-0160.1