4.6 Article

The effects of historical ozone changes on Southern Ocean heat uptake and storage

Journal

CLIMATE DYNAMICS
Volume 57, Issue 7-8, Pages 2269-2285

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-021-05803-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Regents' Faculty Fellowship
  2. Sloan Research Fellowship
  3. Centre for Southern Hemisphere Oceans Research (CSHOR) - Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology (QNLM, China)
  4. Centre for Southern Hemisphere Oceans Research (CSHOR) - Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO, Australia)

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This passage explores the effects of atmospheric ozone concentrations on Southern Ocean heat uptake and storage over the past five decades. It finds that ozone changes significantly impact the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds and contribute to heat redistribution in the Southern Ocean. Heat budget analysis shows that changes in sensible heat flux, shortwave radiation flux, and sea ice formation and melt contribute to the historical heat uptake between 50 and 58 degrees S.
Atmospheric ozone concentrations have dramatically changed in the last five decades of past century. Herein we explore the effects of historical ozone changes that include stratospheric ozone depletion on Southern Ocean heat uptake and storage, by comparing CESM1 large ensemble simulations with fixed-ozone experiment. During 1958-2005, the ozone changes contribute to about 50% of poleward intensification of the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds in historical simulations, which intensifies the Deacon Cell and residual meridional overturning circulation, thus contributing to heat redistribution in the Southern Ocean. Heat budget analysis shows that, in response to historical ozone changes, heat is taken up between 50 and 58 degrees S mainly through changes in sensible heat flux, shortwave radiation flux, and the flux due to seasonal sea ice formation and melt. A major part of the absorbed heat, however, is redistributed equatorward primarily through Eulerian mean ocean heat transport such that ocean heat storage peaks at lower latitudes, around 44 degrees S. The ozone-induced interior warming contributes to about 22% of the historical Southern Ocean warming over 1958-2005. Poleward of 62 degrees S where a subsurface temperature inversion occurs, shoaling isopycnals lead to warming and salinification in the upper ocean. To the north of 50 degrees S, the deep-reaching warming and freshening that correspond to the ocean heat storage maximum are primarily set by the deepening of isopycnals. The large-scale patterns of isopycnal shoaling (deepening) at high (middle) latitudes are consistent with the overlying negative (positive) wind stress curl anomalies related to the poleward intensification of westerly winds, suggesting that the wind changes play an important role in the Southern Ocean heat redistribution under the ozone forcing.

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