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LI Qun,ZHANG Zhanhai,WU Huiding. 2013. Interaction of an anticyclonic eddy with sea ice in the western Arctic Ocean: an eddy-resolving model study. Acta Oceanologica Sinica, 32(3):54-62
Interaction of an anticyclonic eddy with sea ice in the western Arctic Ocean: an eddy-resolving model study
Interaction of an anticyclonic eddy with sea ice in the western Arctic Ocean: an eddy-resolving model study
Received:October 08, 2011  Revised:May 03, 2012
DOI:10.1007/s13131-013-0289-1
Key words:eddy-resolving  anticyclonic eddy  sea ice  western Arctic Ocean  Alaskan coastal current
中文关键词:  eddy-resolving  anticyclonic eddy  sea ice  western Arctic Ocean  Alaskan coastal current
基金项目:The National Natural Science Foundation of China under contract Nos 40906099 and 40930848; the National Science and Technology Supporting Program of China under contract No. 2011BAC03B02-03-02; the Norwegian Research Council program under contract No. 193592/S30.
Author NameAffiliationE-mail
LI Qun Polar Research Institute of China, State Oceanic Administration, Shanghai 200136, China liqun@pric.gov.cn 
ZHANG Zhanhai Polar Research Institute of China, State Oceanic Administration, Shanghai 200136, China  
WU Huiding Polar Research Institute of China, State Oceanic Administration, Shanghai 200136, China
National Marine Environmental Forecasting Center, State Oceanic Administration, Beijing 100081, China 
 
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Abstract:
      The dramatic decline of summer sea ice extent and thickness has been witnessed in the western Arctic Ocean in recent decades, which has motivated scientists to search for possible factors driving the sea ice variability. An eddy-resolving, ice-ocean coupled model covering the entire Arctic Ocean is implemented, with focus on the western Arctic Ocean. Special attention is paid to the summer Alaskan coastal current (ACC), which has a high temperature (up to 5℃ or more) in the upper layer due to the solar radiation over the open water at the lower latitude. Downstream of the ACC after Barrow Point, a surface-intensified anticyclonic eddy is frequently generated and propagate towards the Canada Basin during the summer season when sea ice has retreated away from the coast. Such an eddy has a warm core, and its source is high-temperature ACC water. A typical warm-core eddy is traced. It is trapped just below summer sea ice melt water and has a thickness about 60 m. Temperature in the eddy core reaches 2-3℃, and most water inside the eddy has a temperature over 1℃. With a definition of the eddy boundary, an eddy heat is calculated, which can melt 1 600 km2 of 1 m thick sea ice under extreme conditions.
中文摘要:
      The dramatic decline of summer sea ice extent and thickness has been witnessed in the western Arctic Ocean in recent decades, which has motivated scientists to search for possible factors driving the sea ice variability. An eddy-resolving, ice-ocean coupled model covering the entire Arctic Ocean is implemented, with focus on the western Arctic Ocean. Special attention is paid to the summer Alaskan coastal current (ACC), which has a high temperature (up to 5℃ or more) in the upper layer due to the solar radiation over the open water at the lower latitude. Downstream of the ACC after Barrow Point, a surface-intensified anticyclonic eddy is frequently generated and propagate towards the Canada Basin during the summer season when sea ice has retreated away from the coast. Such an eddy has a warm core, and its source is high-temperature ACC water. A typical warm-core eddy is traced. It is trapped just below summer sea ice melt water and has a thickness about 60 m. Temperature in the eddy core reaches 2-3℃, and most water inside the eddy has a temperature over 1℃. With a definition of the eddy boundary, an eddy heat is calculated, which can melt 1 600 km2 of 1 m thick sea ice under extreme conditions.
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