pacific summer water
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Author(s):  
Jennifer A. MacKinnon ◽  
Matthew H. Alford ◽  
Leo Middleton ◽  
John Taylor ◽  
John B. Mickett ◽  
...  

Abstract Pacific Summer Water eddies and intrusions transport heat and salt from boundary regions into the western Arctic basin. Here we examine concurrent effects of lateral stirring and vertical mixing using microstructure data collected within a Pacific Summer Water intrusion with a length scale of ∼20 km. This intrusion was characterized by complex thermohaline structure in which warm Pacific Summer Water interleaved in alternating layers of O(1 m) thickness with cooler water, due to lateral stirring and intrusive processes. Along interfaces between warm/salty and cold/fresh water masses, the density ratio was favorable to double-diffusive processes. The rate of dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy (ε) was elevated along the interleaving surfaces, with values up to 3×10−8 W kg−1 compared to background ε of less than 10−9 W kg−1. Based on the distribution of ε as a function of density ratio Rρ , we conclude that double-diffusive convection is largely responsible for the elevated ε observed over the survey. The lateral processes that created the layered thermohaline structure resulted in vertical thermohaline gradients susceptible to double-diffusive convection, resulting in upward vertical heat fluxes. Bulk vertical heat fluxes above the intrusion are estimated in the range of 0.2-1 W m−2, with the localized flux above the uppermost warm layer elevated to 2- 10 W m−2. Lateral fluxes are much larger, estimated between 1000-5000 W m−2, and set an overall decay rate for the intrusion of 1-5 years.


Polar Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 100698
Author(s):  
Miaki Muramatsu ◽  
Hiromichi Ueno ◽  
Eiji Watanabe ◽  
Motoyo Itoh ◽  
Jonaotaro Onodera

Harmful Algae ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 61 ◽  
pp. 80-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masafumi Natsuike ◽  
Kohei Matsuno ◽  
Toru Hirawake ◽  
Atsushi Yamaguchi ◽  
Shigeto Nishino ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 114-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyoung Sul La ◽  
Myounghee Kang ◽  
Hans-Uwe Dahms ◽  
Ho Kyung Ha ◽  
Eun Jin Yang ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 119 (11) ◽  
pp. 7523-7548 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.‐L. Timmermans ◽  
A. Proshutinsky ◽  
E. Golubeva ◽  
J. M. Jackson ◽  
R. Krishfield ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 329-351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilken-Jon von Appen ◽  
Robert S. Pickart

Abstract Data from a closely spaced array of moorings situated across the Beaufort Sea shelfbreak at 152°W are used to study the Western Arctic Shelfbreak Current, with emphasis on its configuration during the summer season. Two dynamically distinct states of the current are revealed in the absence of wind, with each lasting approximately one month. The first is a surface-intensified shelfbreak jet transporting warm and buoyant Alaskan Coastal Water in late summer. This is the eastward continuation of the Alaskan Coastal Current. It is both baroclinically and barotropically unstable and hence capable of forming the surface-intensified warm-core eddies observed in the southern Beaufort Sea. The second configuration, present during early summer, is a bottom-intensified shelfbreak current advecting weakly stratified Chukchi Summer Water. It is baroclinically unstable and likely forms the middepth warm-core eddies present in the interior basin. The mesoscale instabilities extract energy from the mean flow such that the surface-intensified jet should spin down over an e-folding distance of 300 km beyond the array site, whereas the bottom-intensified configuration should decay within 150 km. This implies that Pacific Summer Water does not extend far into the Canadian Beaufort Sea as a well-defined shelfbreak current. In contrast, the Pacific Winter Water configuration of the shelfbreak jet is estimated to decay over a much greater distance of approximately 1400 km, implying that it should reach the first entrance to the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.


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