Abstract

Abstract The Southern Ocean (SO) is vital to Earth’s climate system due to its dominant role in exchanging carbon and heat between the ocean and atmosphere and transforming water masses. Evaluating the ability of fully coupled climate models to accurately simulate SO circulation and properties is crucial for building confidence in model projections and advancing model fidelity. By analyzing multiple biases collectively across large model ensembles, physical mechanisms governing the diverse mean-state SO circulation found across models can be identified. This analysis 1) assesses the ability of a large ensemble of models contributed to phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) to simulate observationally based metrics associated with an accurate representation of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), and 2) presents a framework by which the quality of the simulation can be categorized and mechanisms governing the resulting circulation can be deduced. Different combinations of biases in critical metrics including the magnitude and position of the zonally averaged westerly wind stress maximum, wind-driven surface divergence, surface buoyancy fluxes, and properties and transport of North Atlantic Deep Water entering the SO produce distinct mean-state ACC transports. Relative to CMIP3, the quality of the CMIP5 SO simulations has improved. Eight of the thirty-one models simulate an ACC within observational uncertainty (2σ) for approximately the right reasons; that is, the models achieve accuracy in the surface wind stress forcing and the representation of the difference in the meridional density across the current. Improved observations allow for a better assessment of the SO circulation and its properties.

Highlights

  • The Southern Ocean (SO) plays a dominant role in the uptake of excess planetary heat, accounting for 67%–98% of the observed increase in heat content of the global ocean (Roemmich et al 2015)

  • There is a wide range of Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) transports simulated by the CMIP5 models, ranging from the exceptionally high value of 246 Sv simulated by GISS-E2-R-CC to the exceptionally weak transports of 88 and 94 Sv simulated by the CNRM-CM5 and IPSL-CM5B-LR models, respectively (Fig. 1, Table 2)

  • The quality of the simulation of the mean ACC transport in climate models is an emergent feature of a large number of other physical processes and properties

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Summary

Introduction

The Southern Ocean (SO) plays a dominant role in the uptake of excess planetary heat, accounting for 67%–98% of the observed increase in heat content of the global ocean (Roemmich et al 2015). Considering heat and carbon uptake in historical simulations from coupled climate models contributed to phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5), the SO accounts for ;43% of the anthropogenic CO2 uptake and ;75% of the excess heat

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