Researchers

Matthew Alkire

Senior Oceanographer

PSC Department

APL-UW

Suzanne Dickinson

Oceanographer IV

PSC Department

APL-UW

Cecilia Peralta Ferriz

Principal Oceanographer

PSC Department

APL-UW

Kathie Kelly

Senior Principal Oceanographer

AIRS Department

APL-UW

Professor, Oceanography

Jamie Morison

Senior Principal Oceanographer

PSC Department

APL-UW

Affiliate Professor, Oceanography

Ignatius Rigor

Senior Principal Research Scientist

PSC Department

APL-UW

Affiliate Assistant Professor, Oceanography

Mike Steele

Senior Principal Oceanographer

PSC Department

APL-UW

Funding

NSF

NASA

Oceanography from Space

Probing North Atlantic Eighteen Degree Water and Fresh Water in the Arctic

Eighteen Degree Water contributes to the climate memory for the North Atlantic. The water mass carries the coupled atmosphere–ocean signal around the subtropical gyre from year to year. The decades-long satellite record can be used to tell us which processes impact the variability of EDW volume.

Satellite observations open up a window that was closed before. Now we can see the distribution of fresh water for the whole Arctic Ocean.

North Atlantic Eighteen Degree Water

Fresh Water in the Arctic

The strong storms and intense cold air outbreaks of winter in the North Atlantic cause heat to flux from the ocean to the atmosphere, the sea surface temperature to decrease, and the oceanic mixed layer to deepen. This ocean ventilation process creates subtropical mode water — a deep layer extending down from the surface that is of nearly homogeneous temperature. Here in the North Atlantic the water's temperature, 18°C, provides its common name.

APL-UW researchers are using measures of sea surface height by satellite altimeters to create proxies for the mixing of EDW in its formation region just south of the Gulf Stream current and its advection out of the region.

The Arctic Ocean is a repository for a tremendous amount of river runoff, especially from several huge Russian rivers. During the spring of 2008, APL-UW oceanographers on a hydrographic survey in the Arctic detected major shifts in the amount and distribution of fresh water. The Canada basin had freshened, but had the entire Arctic Ocean?

Analysis of satellite records shows that salinity increased on the Russian side of the Arctic and decreased in the Beaufort Sea on the Canadian side. With an Arctic-wide view of circulation from satellite sensors, researchers were able to determine that atmospheric forcing had shifted the transpolar drift counterclockwise and driven Russian runoff east to the Canada Basin.

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