Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea

The Labrador Sea is a climatically important region for the entire globe. As one of the main locations of deep water formation, this subpolar sea helps modulate the strength of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. The deep water formation rate is influenced by freshwater originating from...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hossainzadeh, Saffia
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1786x0g2
id ftcdlib:qt1786x0g2
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Physical oceanography
eddies
freshwater
Labrador Sea
mixed layer depth
RASM
West Greenland Current
spellingShingle Physical oceanography
eddies
freshwater
Labrador Sea
mixed layer depth
RASM
West Greenland Current
Hossainzadeh, Saffia
Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea
topic_facet Physical oceanography
eddies
freshwater
Labrador Sea
mixed layer depth
RASM
West Greenland Current
description The Labrador Sea is a climatically important region for the entire globe. As one of the main locations of deep water formation, this subpolar sea helps modulate the strength of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. The deep water formation rate is influenced by freshwater originating from the Arctic Ocean as well as from the Greenland Ice Sheet. The freshwater entering the sea is then distributed across the Labrador Sea by boundary currents and eddy circulation. In this study we analyze a suite of simulations using a high resolution earth system model, the Regional Arctic System Model (RASM), to explore the freshwater forcing methods needed to properly represent the Labrador Sea dynamics. The first simulation, the H-case, uses an actively coupled ocean and sea ice models only, with sea surface salinity (SSS) restored to mean climatology. The G-case removed the SSS restoring method and instead incorporated land runoff fluxes from the Coordinated Ocean-Ice Reference Experiments version 2 (COREv2) to evolve SSS. The final simulation, the R-case, is a fully coupled run that relies minimally on reanalysis forcings, but instead allows the coupled model physics to drive the simulation, with air-sea-land fluxes that develop and grow without artificial forcing. The critical oceanographic conditions that permit deep water formation can be assessed in our model results by analyzing the strength of water column stratification within the Labrador basin. We explore three methods for calculating the mixed layer depth (MLD) methods. The MLD serves as a measure of the vertical extent of conditions amenable to deep convection and as an indicator of the deep water formation rate. We find that all three methods create a MLD signal that overpredicts, as compared to the existing observations, the spatial and temporal extent of water stratification conducive to deep convection in the Labrador Sea. The maximum density gradient (MDG) method produces on average the lowest MLD values, and hence may best represent the intermittent nature of the deep convection process in the region. Out of the three numerical experiments considered in this study, the R-case shows the most realistic depictions of the extent and depth of MLDs when compared to the G and H-cases. However, even in the R-case, the results of this study highlight the need for further improvements of the ability of the model to produce realistic levels of vertical stratification across this critical high latitude ocean basin.Beyond the MLD analysis, we find that the R-case outperforms the G and H-cases in a number of surface ocean dynamics measures compared to observations. First, it displays a stronger West Greenland Current System (WGCS) from which Irminger Current Anticyclones are generated and buoyancy is distributed across the rest of the basin. The eddy activity in the R-case is not only more frequent, but the eddies are also more effective at supplying freshwater to the interior Labrador Sea compared to the other two simulations. We find that the salinity gradient within the WGCS and the sea surface height (SSH) gradient across the west Greenland shelf are the strongest in the R-case. These characteristics stem from freshwater entering the region through boundary currents and from local sources. The R-case also displays a realistic seasonal variation of surface hydrography, and it more closely follows the evolution of sea ice on a mean annual basis compared to the G and H-cases. This shows that the coupled modeling framework provides great improvement to the surface dynamics of the Labrador Sea.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Hossainzadeh, Saffia
author_facet Hossainzadeh, Saffia
author_sort Hossainzadeh, Saffia
title Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea
title_short Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea
title_full Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea
title_fullStr Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea
title_sort effects of freshwater forcing in the dynamics of the labrador sea
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2016
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1786x0g2
op_coverage 200
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Greenland
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Greenland
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Labrador Sea
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Labrador Sea
Sea ice
op_source Hossainzadeh, Saffia. (2016). Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea. UC Santa Cruz: Earth Science. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1786x0g2
op_relation http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1786x0g2
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op_rights public
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spelling ftcdlib:qt1786x0g2 2023-05-15T15:14:02+02:00 Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea Hossainzadeh, Saffia 200 2016-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1786x0g2 en eng eScholarship, University of California http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1786x0g2 qt1786x0g2 public Hossainzadeh, Saffia. (2016). Effects of Freshwater Forcing in the Dynamics of the Labrador Sea. UC Santa Cruz: Earth Science. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1786x0g2 Physical oceanography eddies freshwater Labrador Sea mixed layer depth RASM West Greenland Current dissertation 2016 ftcdlib 2017-01-13T23:50:08Z The Labrador Sea is a climatically important region for the entire globe. As one of the main locations of deep water formation, this subpolar sea helps modulate the strength of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. The deep water formation rate is influenced by freshwater originating from the Arctic Ocean as well as from the Greenland Ice Sheet. The freshwater entering the sea is then distributed across the Labrador Sea by boundary currents and eddy circulation. In this study we analyze a suite of simulations using a high resolution earth system model, the Regional Arctic System Model (RASM), to explore the freshwater forcing methods needed to properly represent the Labrador Sea dynamics. The first simulation, the H-case, uses an actively coupled ocean and sea ice models only, with sea surface salinity (SSS) restored to mean climatology. The G-case removed the SSS restoring method and instead incorporated land runoff fluxes from the Coordinated Ocean-Ice Reference Experiments version 2 (COREv2) to evolve SSS. The final simulation, the R-case, is a fully coupled run that relies minimally on reanalysis forcings, but instead allows the coupled model physics to drive the simulation, with air-sea-land fluxes that develop and grow without artificial forcing. The critical oceanographic conditions that permit deep water formation can be assessed in our model results by analyzing the strength of water column stratification within the Labrador basin. We explore three methods for calculating the mixed layer depth (MLD) methods. The MLD serves as a measure of the vertical extent of conditions amenable to deep convection and as an indicator of the deep water formation rate. We find that all three methods create a MLD signal that overpredicts, as compared to the existing observations, the spatial and temporal extent of water stratification conducive to deep convection in the Labrador Sea. The maximum density gradient (MDG) method produces on average the lowest MLD values, and hence may best represent the intermittent nature of the deep convection process in the region. Out of the three numerical experiments considered in this study, the R-case shows the most realistic depictions of the extent and depth of MLDs when compared to the G and H-cases. However, even in the R-case, the results of this study highlight the need for further improvements of the ability of the model to produce realistic levels of vertical stratification across this critical high latitude ocean basin.Beyond the MLD analysis, we find that the R-case outperforms the G and H-cases in a number of surface ocean dynamics measures compared to observations. First, it displays a stronger West Greenland Current System (WGCS) from which Irminger Current Anticyclones are generated and buoyancy is distributed across the rest of the basin. The eddy activity in the R-case is not only more frequent, but the eddies are also more effective at supplying freshwater to the interior Labrador Sea compared to the other two simulations. We find that the salinity gradient within the WGCS and the sea surface height (SSH) gradient across the west Greenland shelf are the strongest in the R-case. These characteristics stem from freshwater entering the region through boundary currents and from local sources. The R-case also displays a realistic seasonal variation of surface hydrography, and it more closely follows the evolution of sea ice on a mean annual basis compared to the G and H-cases. This shows that the coupled modeling framework provides great improvement to the surface dynamics of the Labrador Sea. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic Arctic Ocean Greenland Ice Sheet Labrador Sea Sea ice University of California: eScholarship Arctic Arctic Ocean Greenland