Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up

In seasonally ice-free parts of the Arctic Ocean, autumn is characterized by heat loss from the upper ocean to the atmosphere and the onset of freeze up, in which first year sea ice begins to grow in open water areas. The timing of freeze up can be highly spatially variable, complicating efforts to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Crews, Laura, Lee, Craig M, Rainville, Luc, Thomson, Jim
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/47135
id ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/47135
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/47135 2023-05-15T14:58:35+02:00 Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up Crews, Laura Lee, Craig M Rainville, Luc Thomson, Jim 2021-07-12 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/47135 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1773/47135 CC0 1.0 Universal http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Dataset 2021 ftunivwashington 2023-03-12T19:00:49Z In seasonally ice-free parts of the Arctic Ocean, autumn is characterized by heat loss from the upper ocean to the atmosphere and the onset of freeze up, in which first year sea ice begins to grow in open water areas. The timing of freeze up can be highly spatially variable, complicating efforts to provide accurate sea ice forecasting for marine operations. While melt season anomalies can be used to predict freeze up anomalies in some parts of the Arctic, this one-dimensional view merits further examination in light of recent work demonstrating the importance of three-dimensional flows in setting mixed layer properties in marginal ice zones. In this study we show that horizontal advection of sea ice meltwater hastens freeze up in areas distant from the ice edge. We use nearly 800 temperature and salinity profiles along with satellite imagery collected in the central Beaufort Sea in autumn 2018 to document the roughly 100 km advection of a cold and fresh surface meltwater layer over several weeks. After the meltwater arrived, the mixed layer was cooler and shallower than the mixed layer in adjacent areas unaffected by the meltwater. The cooler and shallower meltwater-influenced mixed layer promoted earlier ice formation. Within the meltwater-affected area, advection was nearly as important as heat loss to the atmosphere for seasonally-integrated mixed layer heat loss. Dataset Arctic Arctic Ocean Beaufort Sea Sea ice University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks Arctic Arctic Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
op_collection_id ftunivwashington
language unknown
description In seasonally ice-free parts of the Arctic Ocean, autumn is characterized by heat loss from the upper ocean to the atmosphere and the onset of freeze up, in which first year sea ice begins to grow in open water areas. The timing of freeze up can be highly spatially variable, complicating efforts to provide accurate sea ice forecasting for marine operations. While melt season anomalies can be used to predict freeze up anomalies in some parts of the Arctic, this one-dimensional view merits further examination in light of recent work demonstrating the importance of three-dimensional flows in setting mixed layer properties in marginal ice zones. In this study we show that horizontal advection of sea ice meltwater hastens freeze up in areas distant from the ice edge. We use nearly 800 temperature and salinity profiles along with satellite imagery collected in the central Beaufort Sea in autumn 2018 to document the roughly 100 km advection of a cold and fresh surface meltwater layer over several weeks. After the meltwater arrived, the mixed layer was cooler and shallower than the mixed layer in adjacent areas unaffected by the meltwater. The cooler and shallower meltwater-influenced mixed layer promoted earlier ice formation. Within the meltwater-affected area, advection was nearly as important as heat loss to the atmosphere for seasonally-integrated mixed layer heat loss.
format Dataset
author Crews, Laura
Lee, Craig M
Rainville, Luc
Thomson, Jim
spellingShingle Crews, Laura
Lee, Craig M
Rainville, Luc
Thomson, Jim
Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up
author_facet Crews, Laura
Lee, Craig M
Rainville, Luc
Thomson, Jim
author_sort Crews, Laura
title Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up
title_short Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up
title_full Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up
title_fullStr Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up
title_full_unstemmed Direct Observations of the Role of Lateral Advection of Sea Ice Meltwater in the Onset of Autumn Freeze Up
title_sort direct observations of the role of lateral advection of sea ice meltwater in the onset of autumn freeze up
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/47135
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Beaufort Sea
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Beaufort Sea
Sea ice
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1773/47135
op_rights CC0 1.0 Universal
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
_version_ 1766330723984211968