COLA Report 8

The Response of an Ocean General Circulation Model to Surface Wind Stres Produced by an Atmospheric General Circulation Model

Bohua Huang and Edwin K. Schneider

September 1994


Abstract

Two surface wind stress data sets for 1979-1991, one based on observations and the other from an integration of the COLA atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM) with prescribed SST, are used to drive the GFDL ocean general circulation model. These two runs are referred to as the Control and COLA experiments respectively. Simulated SST and upper ocean heat contents (HC) in the tropical Pacific Ocean are compared with observations and between experiments.

Both simulations reproduced the observed mean SST and HC fields as well as their annual cycles realistically. Major errors common to both runs are colder than observed SST in the eastern equatorial ocean and HC in the western Pacific south of the equator, with errors generally larger in the COLA experiment. New errors arising from the AGCM wind forcing include higher SST near the South American coast throughout the year and weaker HC gradients along the equator in boreal spring. The former is associated with suppressed coastal upwelling by weak along-shore AGCM winds, and the latter is caused by weaker equatorial easterlies in boreal spring.

The low-frequency ENSO fluctuations are also realistic for both runs. Correlations between the observed and simulated SST anomalies from the COLA simulation are as high as those from the Control run in the central equatorial Pacific. A major problem in the COLA simulation is the appearance of unrealistic tropical cold anomalies during the boreal spring of mature El Niño years. These anomalies propagate along the equator from the western Pacific to the eastern coast in about three months, and temporarily eliminate the warm SST and HC anomalies in the eastern Pacific. This erroneous oceanic response in the COLA simulation is caused by a reversal of the westerly wind anomalies on the equator, associated with an unrealistic southward shift of the ITCZ in boreal spring during El Niño events.


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