Comments on “Noise-Induced Transitions in a Simplified Model of the Thermohaline Circulation”

  • Monahan A
  • Timmermann A
  • Lohmann G
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Abstract

A simplified box ocean model for the North Atlantic is used to study the influence of multiplicative short-term climate variability on the stability and long-term dynamics of the North Atlantic thermohaline circulation. A timescale separation between fast temperature and slow salinity fluctuations is used to decouple the dynamical equations resulting in a multiplicative stochastic differential equation for salinity. As a result the qualitative behavior and the stability of the thermohaline circulation become a function of the noise level. This can be understood in terms of the concept of noise-induced transitions. Furthermore, the role of nonvanishing noise autocorrelation times on the dynamics of the thermohaline circulation is investigated. Red noise temperature forcing generates new equilibria, which do not have a deterministic counterpart. This study suggests that noise-induced transitions might have climate relevance.

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Monahan, A. H., Timmermann, A., & Lohmann, G. (2002). Comments on “Noise-Induced Transitions in a Simplified Model of the Thermohaline Circulation.” Journal of Physical Oceanography, 32(3), 1112–1116. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0485(2002)032<1112:coniti>2.0.co;2

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