Effects of high resolution and spinup time on modeled North Atlantic circulation

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Abstract

The influence of a high horizontal resolution (5-15 km) on the general circulation and hydrography in the North Atlantic is investigated using the Finite Element Sea Ice-Ocean Model (FESOM). We find a stronger shift of the upper-ocean circulation and water mass properties during the model spinup in the high-resolutionmodel version compared to the low-resolution (~1°) control run. In quasi equilibrium, the high-resolution model is able to reduce typical low-resolution model biases. Especially, it exhibits a weaker salinification of the NorthAtlantic subpolar gyre and a reducedmixed layer depth in the Labrador Sea. However, during the spinup adjustment, we see that initially improved high-resolution features partially reduce over time: the strength of the Atlantic overturning and the path of the North Atlantic Current are not maintained, and hence hydrographic biases known from low-resolution ocean models return in the high-resolution quasi-equilibrium state. We identify long baroclinic Rossby waves as a potential cause for the strong upper-ocean adjustment of the high-resolution model and conclude that a high horizontal resolution improves the state of the modeled ocean but the model integration length should be chosen carefully.

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Danek, C., Scholz, P., & Lohmann, G. (2019). Effects of high resolution and spinup time on modeled North Atlantic circulation. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 49(5), 1159–1181. https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-18-0141.1

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