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Dive into the research topics where Carolina O. Dufour is active.

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Featured researches published by Carolina O. Dufour.


Journal of Climate | 2015

Impacts on Ocean Heat from Transient Mesoscale Eddies in a Hierarchy of Climate Models

Stephen M. Griffies; Michael Winton; Whit G. Anderson; Rusty Benson; Thomas L. Delworth; Carolina O. Dufour; John P. Dunne; Paul Goddard; Adele K. Morrison; Anthony Rosati; Andrew T. Wittenberg; Jianjun Yin; Rong Zhang

AbstractThe authors characterize impacts on heat in the ocean climate system from transient ocean mesoscale eddies. Their tool is a suite of centennial-scale 1990 radiatively forced numerical climate simulations from three GFDL coupled models comprising the Climate Model, version 2.0–Ocean (CM2-O), model suite. CM2-O models differ in their ocean resolution: CM2.6 uses a 0.1° ocean grid, CM2.5 uses an intermediate grid with 0.25° spacing, and CM2-1deg uses a nominal 1.0° grid.Analysis of the ocean heat budget reveals that mesoscale eddies act to transport heat upward in a manner that partially compensates (or offsets) for the downward heat transport from the time-mean currents. Stronger vertical eddy heat transport in CM2.6 relative to CM2.5 accounts for the significantly smaller temperature drift in CM2.6. The mesoscale eddy parameterization used in CM2-1deg also imparts an upward heat transport, yet it differs systematically from that found in CM2.6. This analysis points to the fundamental role that ocea...


Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2015

Role of Mesoscale Eddies in Cross-Frontal Transport of Heat and Biogeochemical Tracers in the Southern Ocean

Carolina O. Dufour; Stephen M. Griffies; Gregory F. de Souza; Ivy Frenger; Adele K. Morrison; Jaime B. Palter; Jorge L. Sarmiento; Eric D. Galbraith; John P. Dunne; Whit G. Anderson; Richard D. Slater

AbstractThis study examines the role of processes transporting tracers across the Polar Front (PF) in the depth interval between the surface and major topographic sills, which this study refers to as the “PF core.” A preindustrial control simulation of an eddying climate model coupled to a biogeochemical model [GFDL Climate Model, version 2.6 (CM2.6)– simplified version of the Biogeochemistry with Light Iron Nutrients and Gas (miniBLING) 0.1° ocean model] is used to investigate the transport of heat, carbon, oxygen, and phosphate across the PF core, with a particular focus on the role of mesoscale eddies. The authors find that the total transport across the PF core results from a ubiquitous Ekman transport that drives the upwelled tracers to the north and a localized opposing eddy transport that induces tracer leakages to the south at major topographic obstacles. In the Ekman layer, the southward eddy transport only partially compensates the northward Ekman transport, while below the Ekman layer, the sout...


Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2013

Vertical Eddy Fluxes in the Southern Ocean

Jan D. Zika; Julien Le Sommer; Carolina O. Dufour; Jean-Marc Molines; Bernard Barnier; Pierre Brasseur; Raphael Dussin; Thierry Penduff; Daniele Iudicone; Andrew Lenton; Gurvan Madec; Pierre Mathiot; James C. Orr; Emily Shuckburgh; Frédéric Vivier

The overturning circulation of the Southern Ocean has been investigated using eddying coupled ocean–sea ice models. The circulation is diagnosed in both density–latitude coordinates and in depth–density coordinates. Depth–density coordinates follow streamlines where the Antarctic Circumpolar Current is equivalent barotropic, capture the descent of Antarctic Bottom Water, follow density outcrops at the surface, and can be interpreted energetically. In density–latitude coordinates, wind-driven northward transport of light water and southward transport of dense water are compensated by standing meanders and to a lesser degree by transient eddies, consistent with previous results. In depth–density coordinates, however, wind-driven upwelling of dense water and downwelling of light water are compensated more strongly by transient eddy fluxes than fluxes because of standing meanders. Model realizations are discussed where the wind pattern of the southern annular mode is amplified. In density–latitude coordinates, meridional fluxes because of transient eddies can increase to counter changes in Ekman transport and decrease in response to changes in the standing meanders. In depth–density coordinates, vertical fluxes because of transient eddies directly counter changes in Ekman pumping.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2014

An observing system simulation for Southern Ocean carbon dioxide uptake.

Joseph D. Majkut; B. R. Carter; Thomas L. Frölicher; Carolina O. Dufour; Keith B. Rodgers; Jorge L. Sarmiento

The Southern Ocean is critically important to the oceanic uptake of anthropogenic CO2. Up to half of the excess CO2 currently in the ocean entered through the Southern Ocean. That uptake helps to maintain the global carbon balance and buffers transient climate change from fossil fuel emissions. However, the future evolution of the uptake is uncertain, because our understanding of the dynamics that govern the Southern Ocean CO2 uptake is incomplete. Sparse observations and incomplete model formulations limit our ability to constrain the monthly and annual uptake, interannual variability and long-term trends. Float-based sampling of ocean biogeochemistry provides an opportunity for transforming our understanding of the Southern Ocean CO2 flux. In this work, we review current estimates of the CO2 uptake in the Southern Ocean and projections of its response to climate change. We then show, via an observational system simulation experiment, that float-based sampling provides a significant opportunity for measuring the mean fluxes and monitoring the mean uptake over decadal scales.


Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | 2015

Complex functionality with minimal computation: Promise and pitfalls of reduced‐tracer ocean biogeochemistry models

Eric D. Galbraith; John P. Dunne; Anand Gnanadesikan; Richard D. Slater; Jorge L. Sarmiento; Carolina O. Dufour; Gregory F. de Souza; Daniele Bianchi; Mariona Claret; Keith B. Rodgers; Seyedehsafoura Sedigh Marvasti

Earth System Models increasingly include ocean biogeochemistry models in order to predict changes in ocean carbon storage, hypoxia, and biological productivity under climate change. However, state-of-the-art ocean biogeochemical models include many advected tracers, that significantly increase the computational resources required, forcing a trade-off with spatial resolution. Here, we compare a state-of-the art model with 30 prognostic tracers (TOPAZ) with two reduced-tracer models, one with 6 tracers (BLING), and the other with 3 tracers (miniBLING). The reduced-tracer models employ parameterized, implicit biological functions, which nonetheless capture many of the most important processes resolved by TOPAZ. All three are embedded in the same coupled climate model. Despite the large difference in tracer number, the absence of tracers for living organic matter is shown to have a minimal impact on the transport of nutrient elements, and the three models produce similar mean annual preindustrial distributions of macronutrients, oxygen, and carbon. Significant differences do exist among the models, in particular the seasonal cycle of biomass and export production, but it does not appear that these are necessary consequences of the reduced tracer number. With increasing CO2, changes in dissolved oxygen and anthropogenic carbon uptake are very similar across the different models. Thus, while the reduced-tracer models do not explicitly resolve the diversity and internal dynamics of marine ecosystems, we demonstrate that such models are applicable to a broad suite of major biogeochemical concerns, including anthropogenic change. These results are very promising for the further development and application of reduced-tracer biogeochemical models that incorporate “sub-ecosystem-scale” parameterizations.


Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2013

Acceleration of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current by Wind Stress along the Coast of Antarctica

Jan D. Zika; Julien Le Sommer; Carolina O. Dufour; Alberto C. Naveira-Garabato; Adam T. Blaker

The influence of wind forcing on variability of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is investigated using a series of eddy-permitting ocean–sea ice models. At interannual and decadal time scales the ACC transport is sensitive to both the mean strength of westerly winds along the ACC circumpolar path, consistent with zonal momentum balance theories, and sensitive to the wind stresses along the coast of Antarctica, consistent with the “free mode” theory of Hughes et al. A linear combination of the two factors explains differences in ACC transport across 11 regional quasi-equilibrium experiments. Repeated single-year global experiments show that the ACC can be robustly accelerated by both processes. Across an ensemble of simulations with realistic forcing over the second half of the twentieth century, interannual ACC transport variability owing to the free-mode mechanism exceeds that due to the zonal momentum balance mechanism by a factor of between 3.5 and 5 to one. While the ACC transport may not accelerate significantly owing to projected increases in along-ACC winds in future decades, significant changes in transport could still occur because of changes in the stress along the coast of Antarctica.


Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2012

Mechanisms Maintaining Southern Ocean Meridional Heat Transport under Projected Wind Forcing

Paul Spence; Oleg A. Saenko; Carolina O. Dufour; Julien Le Sommer; Matthew H. England

Meridional heat transport (MHT) in the Southern Ocean (SO) and its components are analyzed with two eddy-permitting climate models. The two models present a consistent picture of the MHT response to projected twenty-first-century changes in SO winds. In agreement with a recent analysis based on an ocean data synthesis product, much of the MHT in the SO is found to be due to the time-mean fields of meridional velocity and temperature. The change in the net MHT tends to be small relative to the interannual variability at most SO latitudes. However, both models exhibit significant changes at most latitudes south of 308 Si n individual components of MHT. A simple framework wherein changes in the eddy and mean heat transports tend to compensate each other is not supported by the authors’ results. Instead, the MHT response is composed of sizeable contributions from essentially all of the MHT components, with the eddy and mean heat transports often having the same sign.


Nature Communications | 2017

Spiraling pathways of global deep waters to the surface of the Southern Ocean

Veronica Tamsitt; Henri F. Drake; Adele K. Morrison; Lynne D. Talley; Carolina O. Dufour; Alison R. Gray; Stephen M. Griffies; Matthew R. Mazloff; Jorge L. Sarmiento; Jinbo Wang; Wilbert Weijer

Upwelling of global deep waters to the sea surface in the Southern Ocean closes the global overturning circulation and is fundamentally important for oceanic uptake of carbon and heat, nutrient resupply for sustaining oceanic biological production, and the melt rate of ice shelves. However, the exact pathways and role of topography in Southern Ocean upwelling remain largely unknown. Here we show detailed upwelling pathways in three dimensions, using hydrographic observations and particle tracking in high-resolution models. The analysis reveals that the northern-sourced deep waters enter the Antarctic Circumpolar Current via southward flow along the boundaries of the three ocean basins, before spiraling southeastward and upward through the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Upwelling is greatly enhanced at five major topographic features, associated with vigorous mesoscale eddy activity. Deep water reaches the upper ocean predominantly south of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, with a spatially nonuniform distribution. The timescale for half of the deep water to upwell from 30° S to the mixed layer is ~60–90 years.Deep waters of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans upwell in the Southern Oceanbut the exact pathways are not fully characterized. Here the authors present a three dimensional view showing a spiralling southward path, with enhanced upwelling by eddy-transport at topographic hotspots.


Journal of Climate | 2017

Preconditioning of the Weddell Sea Polynya by the Ocean Mesoscale and Dense Water Overflows

Carolina O. Dufour; Adele K. Morrison; Stephen M. Griffies; Ivy Frenger; Hannah Zanowski; Michael Winton

The Weddell Sea polynya is a large opening in the open-ocean sea ice cover associated with intense deep convection in the ocean. A necessary condition to form and maintain a polynya is the presence of a strong subsurface heat reservoir. This study investigates the processes that control the stratification and hence the buildup of the subsurface heat reservoir in the Weddell Sea. To do so, a climate model run for 200 years under preindustrial forcing with two eddying resolutions in the ocean (0.25° CM2.5 and 0.10° CM2.6) is investigated. Over the course of the simulation, CM2.6 develops two polynyas in the Weddell Sea, while CM2.5 exhibits quasi-continuous deep convection but no polynyas, exemplifying that deep convection is not a sufficient condition for a polynya to occur. CM2.5 features a weaker subsurface heat reservoir than CM2.6 owing to weak stratification associated with episodes of gravitational instability and enhanced vertical mixing of heat, resulting in an erosion of the reservoir. In contrast, in CM2.6, the water column is more stably stratified, allowing the subsurface heat reservoir to build up. The enhanced stratification in CM2.6 arises from its refined horizontal grid spacing and resolution of topography, which allows, in particular, a better representation of the restratifying effect by transient mesoscale eddies and of the overflows of dense waters along the continental slope.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

CO2‐Induced Ocean Warming of the Antarctic Continental Shelf in an Eddying Global Climate Model

Paul Goddard; Carolina O. Dufour; Jianjun Yin; Stephen M. Griffies; Michael Winton

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) CPO project [NA13OAR4310128]; National Science Foundation [OPP-1513411]; University of Arizona faculty startup funding; University of Arizona Department of Geosciences; National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) [NNX14AL40G]; Princeton Environmental Institute (PEI) Grand Challenge initiative; Southern Ocean Carbon and Climate Observations and Modeling (SOCCOM) project under the National Science Foundation [PLR-1425989]

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Stephen M. Griffies

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Adele K. Morrison

Australian National University

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John P. Dunne

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Jorge L. Sarmiento

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Ivy Frenger

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Bernard Barnier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Julien Le Sommer

Grenoble Institute of Technology

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Michael Winton

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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