4.6 Article

Seasonal and Interannual Variations of Irminger Ring Formation and Boundary-Interior Heat Exchange in FLAME

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 46, Issue 6, Pages 1717-1734

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JPO-D-15-0124.1

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Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation

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The contribution of warm-core anticyclones shed by the Irminger Current offWestGreenland, known as Irminger rings, to the restratification of the upper layers of the Labrador Sea is investigated in the 1/128 Family of Linked Atlantic Models Experiment (FLAME) model. The model output, covering the 1990-2004 period, shows strong similarities to observations of the Irminger Current as well as ring observations at a mooring located offshore of the eddy formation region in 2007-09. An analysis of fluxes in the model shows that while the majority of heat exchange with the interior indeed occurs at the site of the Irminger Current instability, the contribution of the coherent Irminger rings is modest (18%). Heat is provided to the convective region mainly through noncoherent anomalies and enhanced local mixing by the rings facilitating further exchange between the boundary and interior. The time variability of the eddy kinetic energy and the boundary to interior heat flux in the model are strongly correlated to the density gradient between the dense convective region and the more buoyant boundary current. In FLAME, the density variations of the boundary current are larger than those of the convective region, thereby largely controlling changes in lateral fluxes. Synchronous long-term trends in temperature in the boundary and the interior over the 15-yr simulation suggest that the heat flux relative to the temperature of the interior is largely steady on these time scales.

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