Abstract

The effect of a near-bottom transport scheme on the sensitivity of the thermohaline circulation is analyzed in a coupled model. In this model with idealized geometry of the Atlantic, it is shown that in the presence of a northern source of deep water, an accurate representation of the overflow process has a stabilizing effect on the thermohaline circulation for subpolar sea-surface salinity perturbations. The large-scale overturning circulation can be maintained in the presence of a continued deep-water formation north of the sill. Experiments suggest that without a sufficient coupling across a sill in the northern North Atlantic, the response of the ocean’s circulation to subpolar atmospheric variability may be too strong.

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