Relative contributions of anomalous heat fluxes and effective heat
capacity to sea surface temperature variability
Abstract
Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) vary not only due to heat exchange
across the air-sea interface but also due to changes in effective heat
capacity as primarily determined by mixed layer depth (MLD). Here, we
investigate seasonal and regional characteristics of the contribution of
MLD anomalies to SST variability using observational datasets. We
propose a metric called Flux Divergence Angle (FDA), which can quantify
the relative contributions of surface heat fluxes and MLD anomalies to
SST variability. Using this metric, we find that MLD anomalies tend to
amplify SST anomalies in the extra-tropics, especially in the eastern
ocean basins, during spring and summer. This amplification is explained
by a positive feedback loop between SST and MLD via upper ocean
stratification. In contrast, MLD anomalies tend to suppress SST
anomalies in the eastern tropical Pacific. The MLD contribution in the
summer hemispheres is more pronounced on seasonal timescales than on
sub-monthly timescales.