CLIMATE
CHANGE IN ATLANTIC LARGER THAN PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT A
NASA satellite confirms that overturning in the North Atlantic Ocean - a process
where surface water sinks and deep water rises due to varying water densities
- speeds up and slows down by 20 to 30 percent over 12 to 14 year cycles. Scientists
previously believed that a change of this magnitude would take hundreds of years,
rather than close to a decade.
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findings were made possible by TOPEX/Poseidon satellite data that measured sea
surface height in the North Atlantic. Sirpa
Hakkinen of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., used computer
models to link sea surface height to natural cycles of overturning in the North
Atlantic. She found that when overturning increases, so does the sea surface height,
and vice versa. As
the Gulf Stream moves warm surface water from the equator north through the Atlantic,
the water cools, gets saltier due to evaporation and becomes very dense. By the
time it approaches the coast of Newfoundland, south of Greenland, it becomes dense
enough to sink. The current then slowly travels in a kind of conveyor belt in
the deep ocean back to the equator where it heats, becomes less salty and rises.
This process of sinking and rising water is called overturning. "The
close association of the sea surface height and changes in overturning provides
a simple method for assessing the state of the ocean," Hakkinen said. The
study, which appears in the July 15 issue of Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans,
supports the idea that ocean overturning drives the decadal cycles of the Gulf
Stream current, as opposed to winds. With careful modeling simulations, Hakkinen
extrapolated data back to the 1950s to find overturning shifts on a near decadal
time scale. "These
kinds of occurrences can be expected every 12 to 14 years," she said. "It
appears that in the last 50 years there have been three large-scale changes in
the overturning." When
a lot of warm water moves northward, the overturning process initially speeds
up, and that pulls the current along at a faster rate, and increases the sea surface
height along the current. But eventually, as warm water starts to build up in
the north near Newfoundland, it has a negative effect on overturning. When enough
warm water collects up north, it becomes less dense, and slows down the circulation,
which in turn lowers the sea surface height. The cycle starts anew as the warm
water that has pooled north eventually cools again and begins to sink. Using
TOPEX/Poseidon sea surface height data from 1992 to 2000, Hakkinen found that
between the winters of 1995 and 1996, sea surface height over the Gulf Stream
decreased by about 12 centimeters. She suggests that this large, abrupt change
in sea surface height can be associated with a slow-down of overturning from peaks
in the early 90s. By
closely examining these heights, Hakkinen's results showed that the rate of overturn
not only increases and decreases according to near-decadal cycles, but that rate
varies by as much as 20 to 30 percent from the annual mean. "They
are very large changes," Hakkinen said. "People have not wanted to believe
that you can have these kinds of changes over a decadal time scale. They want
to think about these changes over hundreds to thousands of years. But in fact,
very large changes can occur over decadal time scales." "The
altimeter has provided a useful tool to study and monitor the ocean circulation
on spatial scales from 100 to 1000's of kilometers and temporal scales from days
to years and beyond with the increasing record length," she said. The
Topex/Poseidon satellite was launched on August 10, 1992. A joint effort between
NASA and France's National Center for Space Studies, this satellite mission measures
global sea level every 10 days. This mission allows scientists to chart the height
of the seas across ocean basins with an accuracy of less than 4 centimeters (1.5
inches), affording a unique view of ocean phenomena such as El Niño and
La Niña. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory manages the mission. More
information on Topex/Poseidon can be found at: http://topex-www.jpl.nasa.gov/.
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