Seasonal and Interannual Variations of Heat Fluxes in the Barents Sea Region

2018 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. L. Bashmachnikov ◽  
A. Yu. Yurova ◽  
L. P. Bobylev ◽  
A. V. Vesman
2021 ◽  
pp. 179-194
Author(s):  
I.O. Dumanskaya ◽  

The warming of the Arctic, especially intensified at the beginning of the XXI century, is accompanied by a significant decrease in the area of ice cover in the Arctic seas. The article shows the quantitative changes in the ice parameters of the Barents Sea, as well as factors affecting the formation of ice cover in recent years. In the twenty-first century the frequency of occurrence of mild winters has increased by 17%, the frequency of severe winters has decreased by 19%. Significantly increased the temperature at the meteorological station Malye Karmakuly, water temperature at transect "Kola Meridian", atmospheric and oceanic heat fluxes, and speed of sea currents on the Western border of the Barents sea. The duration of the ice period decreased by an average of 2–3 weeks, and the rate of reduction of ice cover was 7.2% for 10 years. This is the highest speed compared to other Arctic seas. The article shows that the variability of the ice cover of the Barents Sea and other parameters of the natural environment in the region has the cyclic character. Presumably, the cycle period is close to 84 years, which corresponds to the orbital period of Uranium. The minimum sea ice extent after 1935–1945 is expected in the period 2019–2029.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanislav Myslenkov ◽  
Anna Shestakova ◽  
Dmitry Chechin

Abstract. This paper investigates the impact of sea waves on turbulent heat fluxes in the Barents Sea. The COARE algorithm, meteorological data from reanalysis and wave data from the WW3 wave model results were used. The turbulent heat fluxes were calculated using the modified Charnock parameterization for the roughness length and several parameterizations, which explicitly account for the sea waves parameters. A catalog of storm wave events and a catalog of extreme cold-air outbreaks over the Barents Sea were created and used to calculate heat fluxes during extreme events. The important role of cold-air outbreaks in the energy exchange of the Barents Sea and the atmosphere is demonstrated. A high correlation was found between the number of cold-air outbreaks days and turbulent fluxes of sensible and latent heat, as well as with the net flux of long-wave radiation averaged over the ice-free surface of the Barents Sea during a cold season. The differences in the long-term mean values of heat fluxes calculated using different parameterizations for the roughness length are small and are on average 1–3 % of the flux magnitude. Parameterizations of Taylor and Yelland and Oost et al. on average lead to an increase of the magnitude of the fluxes, and the parameterization of Drennan et al. leads to a decrease of the magnitude of the fluxes over the entire sea compared to the Charnock parameterization. The magnitude of heat fluxes and their differences during the storm wave events exceed the mean values by a factor of 2. However, the effect of explicit accounting for the wave parameters is, on average, small and multidirectional, depending on the used parameterization for the roughness length. In the climatic aspect, it can be argued that the explicit accounting for sea waves in the calculations of heat fluxes can be neglected. However, during the simultaneously observed storm waves and cold-air outbreaks, the sensitivity of the calculated values of fluxes to the used parameterizations increase along with the turbulent heat transfer increase. In some extreme cases, during storms and cold-air outbreaks, the difference reaches 700 W m−2.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (20) ◽  
pp. 7017-7035 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitchell Bushuk ◽  
Xiaosong Yang ◽  
Michael Winton ◽  
Rym Msadek ◽  
Matthew Harrison ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Dynamical prediction systems have shown potential to meet the emerging need for seasonal forecasts of regional Arctic sea ice. Observationally constrained initial conditions are a key source of skill for these predictions, but the direct influence of different observation types on prediction skill has not yet been systematically investigated. In this work, we perform a hierarchy of observing system experiments with a coupled global data assimilation and prediction system to assess the value of different classes of oceanic and atmospheric observations for seasonal sea ice predictions in the Barents Sea. We find notable skill improvements due to the inclusion of both sea surface temperature (SST) satellite observations and subsurface conductivity–temperature–depth (CTD) measurements. The SST data are found to provide the crucial source of interannual variability, whereas the CTD data primarily provide climatological and trend improvements. Analysis of the Barents Sea ocean heat budget suggests that ocean heat content anomalies in this region are driven by surface heat fluxes on seasonal time scales.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 5575-5595
Author(s):  
Stanislav Myslenkov ◽  
Anna Shestakova ◽  
Dmitry Chechin

Abstract. This paper investigates the impact of sea waves on turbulent heat fluxes in the Barents Sea. The Coupled Ocean–Atmosphere Response Experiment (COARE) algorithm, meteorological data from reanalysis and wave data from the WAVEWATCH III wave model results were used. The turbulent heat fluxes were calculated using the modified Charnock parameterization for the roughness length and several parameterizations that explicitly account for the sea wave parameters. A catalog of storm wave events and a catalog of extreme cold-air outbreaks over the Barents Sea were created and used to calculate heat fluxes during extreme events. The important role of cold-air outbreaks in the energy exchange between the Barents Sea and the atmosphere is demonstrated. A high correlation was found between the number of cold-air outbreak days and turbulent fluxes of sensible and latent heat, as well as with the net flux of longwave radiation averaged over the ice-free surface of the Barents Sea during a cold season. The differences in the long-term mean values of heat fluxes calculated using different parameterizations for the roughness length are small and are on average 1 %–3 % of the flux magnitude. The parameterizations of Taylor and Yelland (2001) and Oost et al. (2002) lead to an increase in the magnitude of the fluxes on average, and the parameterization of Drennan et al. (2003) leads to a decrease in the magnitude of the fluxes over the entire sea compared with the Charnock parameterization. The magnitude of heat fluxes and their differences during the storm wave events exceed the mean values by a factor of 2. However, the effect of explicitly accounting for the wave parameters is, on average, small and multidirectional, depending on the parameterization used for the roughness length. With respect to the climatic aspect, it can be argued that explicitly accounting for sea waves in the calculations of heat fluxes can be neglected. However, during the simultaneously observed storm wave events and cold-air outbreaks, the sensitivity of the calculated values of fluxes to the parameterizations used increases along with the turbulent heat transfer increase. In some extreme cases, during storms and cold-air outbreaks, the difference exceeds 700 W m−2.


2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 280-292
Author(s):  
G. V. Surkova ◽  
V. A. Romanenko

The paper investigates the current regime of turbulent heat exchange with the atmosphere over the Barents and Kara Seas, as well as its spatial, seasonal and temporal variability (1979–2018). It is shown that over the past decades, the areas of the location of the centers of maximum energy exchange between the sea surface and the atmosphere have not changed significantly in comparison with the middle and second half of the XX century. It was revealed that the greatest seasonal and synoptic variability of heat fluxes is typical of the central and western parts of the Barents Sea. It was found that both indicators of variability in the cold season are 2–5 and more times higher than in the warm season, and the spatial heterogeneity of the indicators of variability in winter is about twice as large as in summer. Quantitative estimates have shown that, within the Barents Sea, the spatial variability of fluxes in winter may be 5–10 times or more higher than the summer values. Above the Kara Sea, the greatest heterogeneity in the fluxes field is typical of the autumn and early winter seasons. It has been found that the annual sums of heat fluxes from the surface of the Barents Sea exceed the values for the Kara Sea, on average, 3–4 and 5–6 times, for sensible and latent heat fluxes, respectively, and in some years may differ tens of times. For the period under study, a single trend of the integral fluxes over the water area and their annual magnitude is not expressed, although there are multi-year decadal fluctuations. It is shown that, despite the significant difference in the thermal regime of the Barents and Kara seas and the lower atmosphere above them, the interannual changes in the total turbulent flows are quite well synchronized, which indicates the commonality of large-scale hydrometeorological processes in these seas, which affect the energy exchange between the seas and the atmosphere.


Author(s):  
K. A. Kalavichchi ◽  
I. L. Bashmachnikov

This paper presents a study the interannual variability of the convergence oceanic and atmospheric advective heat fluxes in the Barents Sea region for 19932014, using combined in situ, satellite and numerical model-based oceanic and atmospheric data-sets: ARMOR-3D and ERA-Interim. On inter-decadal scales, the leading role of convergence of the oceanic heat flux, and on interannual scale of atmospheric heat flux are demonstrated to play the leading role in variations of the sea-ice area of the Barents Sea. The inter-decadal and the interannual variations of the oceanic heat flux are found to be mainly shaped by variations of the current velocity. In the long-term tendencies the current velocity is responsible for about 70% of the increase in the oceanic heat flux, mainly due to a higher transport in the North Cape Current. Variations in transport of the North Cape current and of the Return current are governed by variations in the meridional gradients of the zonal wind speed, in turn, caused by the stronger oceanic heat transport into the Barents sea and by the consequent melting of the sea-ice. The in situ observations supports the effectiveness of the previously suggested positive feedback between variations in the oceanic heat flux into the Barents Sea, and changes of the sea-ice area and of the atmospheric circulation in the Barents Sea region on the decadal time scales.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrina Kalavichchi ◽  
Igor Bashmachnikov

<p>This study investigates the mechanism of positive feedback in the Barents Sea region, using the results of reanalyses from 1993 to 2014. Vertical heat fluxes, wind and pressure fields are obtained from OAFlux and ERA-Interim databases, the water temperature and currents from the ARMOR-3D database.</p><p>Oceanic heat transport was computed through three sections-at the entrance to the Barents Sea (BSO), in the southern part of the Norwegian sea and in the west of Spitsbergen. The results show that, during the study period, the oceanic heat flux through BSO was rapidly increasing, significantly faster than in the northwards heat transport in the Norwegian Sea. west of Spitsbergen, a negative linear trend was observed, indicating a redistribution of the increasing transport of the Atlantic Water into the Nordic Seas.</p><p>Based on reanalyses data, we show the tight relationship between the current velocities through the BSO and the change in the gradient of the zonal component of wind velocity. The variability of the atmospheric circulation and the variability of the convergence of atmospheric heat fluxes for the studied region was also assessed.</p><p>The results also show that, in winter, with increasing oceanic heat flux through the BSO, the turbulent heat fluxes in the southwestern part of the sea decreased, and the northern part of the sea and west of Novaya Zemlya increased. In the annual means, the increasing heat flux from the ocean to the atmosphere is due to a retreat of the ice edge and an increase in the ice-free area of the sea. The sea-surface atmospheric pressure also increased over the water area, with a maximum changes in the south-east of the sea.</p><p>For the years with the maximum oceanic winter heat fluxes into the Barents Sea, the atmospheric heat flux across the southern boundary increased, while it across the northern border weakened. The convergence of the atmospheric heat fluxes increased only at the sea surface (1000-975 hPa), whereas above (975-100 hPa) the convergence decreased, and the total atmospheric heat convergence varies out of phase with that of the ocean.</p><div> <div> <div> <p>This study was supported by the Russian Science Foun- dation, project no. 17-17-01151.</p> </div> </div> </div>


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