Wind-Forced Variability of the Remote Meridional Overturning Circulation
- Michael Spall,
- David Nieves
Abstract
The mechanisms by which time-dependent wind stress anomalies at
mid-latitudes can force variability in the meridional overturning
circulation at low latitudes are explored. It is shown that winds are
effective at forcing remote variability in the overturning circulation
when forcing periods are near the mid-latitude baroclinic Rossby wave
basin-crossing timescale. Remote overturning is required by an imbalance
in the mid-latitude mass storage and release resulting from the
dependence of the Rossby wave phase speed on latitude. A heuristic
theory is developed that predicts the strength and frequency-dependence
of the remote overturning well when compared to a two-layer numerical
model. The theory indicates that the variable overturning strength,
relative to the anomalous Ekman transport, depends primarily on the
ratio of the meridional spatial scale of the anomalous wind stress to
its latitude. For strongly forced systems, a mean deep western boundary
current can also significantly enhance the overturning variability at
all latitudes. For sufficiently large thermocline displacements, the
deep western boundary current alternates between interior and
near-boundary pathways in response to fluctuations in the wind, leading
to large anomalies in the volume of North Atlantic Deep Water stored at
mid-latitudes and in the downstream deep western boundary current
transport.