March 30, 2016
Journal Article

Tracking ocean heat uptake during the surface warming hiatus

Abstract

Ocean heat uptake is observed to penetrate deep during the recent hiatus1,2,3 of global warming in the Atlantic and Southern Ocean. This has been suggested to indicate that the two regions are the driver of the surface warming hiatus4. We show that the deep heat penetration in the Atlantic and Southern Ocean is not unique to the hiatus but common to the past four decades including the 1970s-90s epoch of accelerated surface warming. Our analyses of a large ensemble simulation5 confirm the deep heat penetration in the Atlantic and Southern Ocean in ensemble members with or without surface warming hiatus in the early 21th century. During the past four decades, the global ocean heat content (OHC) of upper 1500m is dominated by a warming trend, and the depth of anthropogenic heat penetration merely reflects the depth of the mean meridional overturning circulation in the basin. Thus the heat penetration depth is not a valid basis to infer the hiatus mechanism.

Revised: December 15, 2016 | Published: March 30, 2016

Citation

Liu W., S. Xie, and J. Lu. 2016. Tracking ocean heat uptake during the surface warming hiatus. Nature Communications 7. PNNL-SA-111949. doi:10.1038/ncomms10926