Author/Authors :
THIERRY HUCK ، نويسنده , , Isaac M. Held and Geoffrey K. Vallis ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
What can we learn from performing a linear stability analysis of the large-scale ocean circulation?
Can we predict from the basic state the occurrence of interdecadal oscillations, such as
might be found in a forward integration of the full equations of motion? If so, do the structure
and period of the linearly unstable modes resemble those found in a forward integration? We
pursue here a preliminary study of these questions for a case in idealized geometry, in which
the full nonlinear behavior can also be explored through forward integrations. Specifically, we
perform a three-dimensional linear stability analysis of the thermally-driven circulation of the
planetary geostrophic equations. We examine the resulting eigenvalues and eigenfunctions,
comparing them with the structure of the interdecadal oscillations found in the fully nonlinear
model in various parameter regimes. We obtain a steady state by running the time-dependent,
nonlinear model to equilibrium using restoring boundary conditions on surface temperature.
If the surface heat fluxes are then diagnosed, and these values applied as constant flux boundary
conditions, the nonlinear model switches into a state of perpetual, finite amplitude, interdecadal
oscillations. We construct a linearized version of the model by empirically evaluating the tangent
linear matrix at the steady state, under both restoring and constant-flux boundary conditions.
An eigen-analysis shows there are no unstable eigenmodes of the linearized model with restoring
conditions. In contrast, under constant flux conditions, we find a single unstable eigenmode
that shows a striking resemblance to the fully-developed oscillations in terms of three-dimensional
structure, period and growth rate. The mode may be damped through either surface
restoring boundary conditions or sufficiently large horizontal tracer diffusion. The success of
this simple numerical method in idealized geometry suggests applications in the study of the
stability of the ocean circulation in more realistic configurations, and the possibility of predicting
potential oceanic modes, even weakly damped, that might be excited by stochastic atmospheric
forcing or mesoscale ocean eddies.