4.7 Article

Variability and Redistribution of Heat in the Atlantic Water Boundary Current North of Svalbard

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 123, Issue 9, Pages 6373-6391

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018JC013814

Keywords

Atlantic Water; Arctic Ocean; heat flux; Nansen Basin; boundary current; A-TWAIN

Categories

Funding

  1. Fram Centre flagship Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, technology and agreements
  2. Research Council of Norway through the project The Nansen Legacy [RCN 276730]
  3. National Science Foundation [ARC-1264098]
  4. Steven Grossman Family Foundation
  5. Polish-Norwegian Research Programme under the project PAVE (Atlantic Water Pathways to the Arctic: Variability and Effects on Climate and Ecosystems) [POL-NOR/202006/10/2013]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We quantify Atlantic Water heat loss north of Svalbard using year-long hydrographic and current records from three moorings deployed across the Svalbard Branch of the Atlantic Water boundary current in 2012-2013. The boundary current loses annually on average 16W m(-2) during the eastward propagation along the upper continental slope. The largest vertical fluxes of >100W m(-2) occur episodically in autumn and early winter. Episodes of sea ice imported from the north in November 2012 and February 2013 coincided with large ocean-to-ice heat fluxes, which effectively melted the ice and sustained open water conditions in the middle of the Arctic winter. Between March and early July 2013, a persistent ice cover-modulated air-sea fluxes. Melting sea ice at the start of the winter initiates a cold, up to 100-m-deep halocline separating the ice cover from the warm Atlantic Water. Semidiurnal tides dominate the energy over the upper part of the slope. The vertical tidal structure depends on stratification and varies seasonally, with the potential to contribute to vertical fluxes with shear-driven mixing. Further processes impacting the heat budget include lateral heat loss due to mesoscale eddies, and modest and negligible contributions of Ekman pumping and shelf break upwelling, respectively. The continental slope north of Svalbard is a key example regarding the role of ocean heat for the sea ice cover. Our study underlines the complexity of the ocean's heat budget that is sensitive to the balance between oceanic heat advection, vertical fluxes, air-sea interaction, and the sea ice cover. The Atlantic Water boundary current carries heat into the Arctic Ocean as it flows through Fram Strait and along the continental slope north of Svalbard. Using observations from bottom-mounted instruments, we investigated different processes leading to heat loss from the Atlantic Water layer in the region north of Svalbard. Most of the changes recorded over the course of 1year from September 2012 to September 2013 at 81.5 degrees N, 31 degrees E are driven by changes further upstream and by air-sea heat exchange. However, significant local heat loss can be caused by mixing due to wind or tides. Seasonal differences are large and predominantly caused by absence or presence of sea ice (autumn/early winter versus spring/early summer), influence of melt water and wind on the stability of the water column, and a seasonally changing light regime.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available