A Deterministic Limit for Ocean Conveyor Collapse: Deriving the Critical AMOC Buoyancy Radius via Salinity Advection
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The stability of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is traditionally evaluated using probabilistic Global Circulation Models (GCMs) and classical Stommel box models, which treat thermohaline collapse as a statistical tipping point driven by gradual warming. While these models effectively simulate bulk density changes over time, they fail to deterministically define the exact spatial boundary where a localized freshwater anomaly irrevocably shuts down deep-water formation. This paper introduces a strict continuum framework for macroscopic thermohaline scaling. By modeling the subpolar downwelling zones as a dynamic balance between the macroscopic advection of ocean salinity and the localized suppression of density-driven sinking via freshwater flux, we derive a universal critical buoyancy radius (RAMOC). We demonstrate that the collapse of the global ocean conveyor is not a probabilistic climate event, but an exact deterministic limit where localized buoyancy strictly overpowers the advective thermal-salinity capacity of the global ocean. We contrast this geometric invariant with traditional climate probability matrices and propose a blueprint for Active Basin Monitoring (ABM) using real-time Argo float telemetry.
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A_Deterministic_Limit_for_Ocean_Conveyor_Collapse__Deriving_the_Critical_AMOC_Buoyancy_Radius_via_Salinity_Advection.pdf
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