GRACE and GRACE-FO Related Publications (no abstracts)

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GRACE Satellite Observations of Antarctic Bottom Water Transport Variability

Jeffree, Jemma, Hogg, Andrew McC., Morrison, Adele K., Solodoch, Aviv, Stewart, Andrew L., and McGirr, Rebecca, 2024. GRACE Satellite Observations of Antarctic Bottom Water Transport Variability. Journal of Geophysical Research (Oceans), 129(10):e2024JC020990, doi:10.1029/2024JC020990.

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BibTeX

@ARTICLE{2024JGRC..12920990J,
       author = {{Jeffree}, Jemma and {Hogg}, Andrew McC. and {Morrison}, Adele K. and {Solodoch}, Aviv and {Stewart}, Andrew L. and {McGirr}, Rebecca},
        title = "{GRACE Satellite Observations of Antarctic Bottom Water Transport Variability}",
      journal = {Journal of Geophysical Research (Oceans)},
     keywords = {AABW, GRACE, ocean model, meridional overturning circulation},
         year = 2024,
        month = oct,
       volume = {129},
       number = {10},
          eid = {e2024JC020990},
        pages = {e2024JC020990},
     abstract = "{Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) formation and transport constitute a key
        component of the global ocean circulation. Direct observations
        suggest that AABW volumes and transport rates may be decreasing,
        but these observations are too temporally or spatially sparse to
        determine the cause. To address this problem, we develop a new
        method to reconstruct AABW transport variability using data from
        the GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) satellite
        mission. We use an ocean general circulation model to
        investigate the relationship between ocean bottom pressure and
        AABW: we calculate both of these quantities in the model, and
        link them using a regularized linear regression. Our
        reconstruction from modeled ocean bottom pressure can capture
        65\%-90\% of modeled AABW transport variability, depending on
        the ocean basin. When realistic observational uncertainty values
        are added to the modeled ocean bottom pressure, the
        reconstruction can still capture 30\%-80\% of AABW transport
        variability. Using the same regression values, the
        reconstruction skill is within the same range in a second,
        independent, general circulation model. We conclude that our
        reconstruction method is not unique to the model in which it was
        developed and can be applied to GRACE satellite observations of
        ocean bottom pressure. These advances allow us to create the
        first global reconstruction of AABW transport variability over
        the satellite era. Our reconstruction provides information on
        the interannual variability of AABW transport, but more accurate
        observations are needed to discern AABW transport trends.}",
          doi = {10.1029/2024JC020990},
       adsurl = {https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2024JGRC..12920990J},
      adsnote = {Provided by the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System}
}

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