Abstract

Abstract Increasing the value of along-isopycnal diffusivity in a coupled model is shown to lead to enhanced stability of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) formation with respect to freshwater (FW) perturbations. This is because the North Atlantic (NA) surface salinity budget is dominated by upward salt fluxes resulting from winter convection for low values of along-isopycnal diffusivity, whereas along-isopycnal diffusion exerts a strong control on NA surface salinity at higher diffusivity values. Shutdown of wintertime convection in response to a FW pulse allows the development of a halocline responsible for the suppression of deep sinking. In contrast to convection, isopycnal salt diffusion proves a more robust mechanism for preventing the formation of a halocline, as surface freshening leads only to a flattening of isopycnals, leaving at least some diffusive removal of anomalous surface FW in place. As a result, multiple equilibria are altogether absent for sufficiently high values of isopycnal diffusivity. Furthermore, the surface salinity budget of the North Pacific is also dominated by along-isopycnal diffusion when diffusivity values are sufficiently high, leading to a breakdown of the permanent halocline there and the associated onset of deep-water formation.

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