From this page you can download the RAPID 26N Heat Transport timeseries data hosted at the University of Miami.

 

How to acknowledge data from the RAPID-MOCHA project:

Data from RAPID-MOCHA monitoring project are made freely available to the public. The project scientists would appreciate it if you added the following acknowledgment to any publications that use this data:

"Data from the RAPID-MOCHA program are funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and U.K. Natural Environment Research Council and are freely available at www.rapid.ac.uk/data/data-download and mocha.rsmas.miami.edu/mocha."

 

Digital Object Identifier (doi)

Suggested citation for Heat Transport Data:

Johns W.E., Elipot S., Smeed D.A., Moat B., King B., Volkov D.L., Smith R.H., (2023). Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) Heat Transport Time Series between April 2004 and December 2020 at 26.5°N (v.2020) [Dataset]. University of Miami Libraries. https://doi.org/10.17604/3nfq-va20

The heat flux data can be downloaded from the RSMAS data page.

 

REFERENCE
Johns, W. E., S. Elipot, D A Smeed, B. Moat, B. King, D. L. Volkov and Ryan Smith, 2023: Towards two decades of Atlantic Ocean mass and heat transports at 26.5 N, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. A, 381.

Figure. Time series of Florida Current transport (yellow), Ekman transport (red), upper mid-ocean transport (purple) and overturning transport (dark blue) for the available record from 2004 to 2020. Also shown are the basinwide transports in the upper and lower NADW layers (UNADW: 1100-3000 m; LNADW: 3000-5000 m; green and light blue lines, respectively). The high-frequency data represent 10-day averages while the superimposed curves are 18-month lowpass filtered data after removal of each series' climatological seasonal cycle