Episodic Reversal of Autumn Ice Advance Caused by Release of Ocean Heat in the Beaufort Sea

Abstract

High‐resolution measurements of the air‐ice‐ocean system during an October 2015 event in the Beaufort Sea demonstrate how stored ocean heat can be released to temporarily reverse seasonal ice advance. Strong on‐ice winds over a vast fetch caused mixing and release of heat from the upper ocean. This heat was sufficient to melt large areas of thin, newly formed pancake ice; an average of 10 MJ/m2 was lost from the upper ocean in the study area, resulting in ∼3–5 cm pancake sea ice melt. Heat and salt budgets create a consistent picture of the evolving air‐ice‐ocean system during this event, in both a fixed and ice‐following (Lagrangian) reference frame. The heat lost from the upper ocean is large compared with prior observations of ocean heat flux under thick, multiyear Arctic sea ice. In contrast to prior studies, where almost all heat lost goes into ice melt, a significant portion of the ocean heat released in this event goes directly to the atmosphere, while the remainder (∼30–40%) goes into melting sea ice. The magnitude of ocean mixing during this event may have been enhanced by large surface waves, reaching nearly 5 m at the peak, which are becoming increasingly common in the autumn Arctic Ocean. The wave effects are explored by comparing the air‐ice‐ocean evolution observed at short and long fetches, and a common scaling for Langmuir turbulence. After the event, the ocean mixed layer was deeper and cooler, and autumn ice formation resumed.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
May 01, 2018
Source ID
10.1002/2018jc013764

Entities

People

  • Guoqiang Liu
  • Jennifer M. Jackson
  • Jim Thomson
  • Luc Rainville
  • Madison Smith
  • Ola Persson
  • Robin Robertson
  • Sharon Stammerjohn
  • William Perrie

Organizations

  • Bedford Institute of Oceanography
  • Hakai Institute
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • Office of Naval Research
  • University of Colorado Boulder
  • University of Washington
  • Xiamen University

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Mathematics or Statistics
  • Ocean-Atmosphere Mesoscale Modeling, Data Assimilation, and Flux Boundary Layers
  • Polar and Arctic Studies