Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Exploring the mixing of freshwater around Greenland in a high-resolution climate model using the freshwater transformation framework
View through CrossRef
In the sub-polar North Atlantic, perturbations to climatological mean freshwater fluxes can impact the strength of the climatically important Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, providing an impetus for us to try and understand the pathways of freshwater in the region. In recent years, our understanding of the climatological mean horizontal pathways of freshwater through Greenland’s boundary current systems and out of the sub-polar North Atlantic have increased; however, we lack a thorough understanding of where freshwaters are destroyed by processes such as diahaline mixing.In this study, I describe and use the freshwater transformation framework (based on the water mass transformation framework pioneered by Walin (1982)) to quantify how rates of diahaline mixing vary around Greenland with both season and region. I demonstrate the framework using an eddy resolving coupled configuration of the ICON earth system model (5 km ocean, 10 km atmosphere). Two patterns emerge:the destruction of fresh waters by mixing is stronger during wintertime than summertime;
the destruction of fresh waters by mixing is stronger off the coast of southern Greenland than Northern Greenland.
Using the freshwater transformation framework, I also explore the interplay of diahaline mixing with the salinification of boundary currents, surface sources of freshwater, and the storage of low salinity water in different regions. I find that different processes dominate the climatological mean freshwater balance depending upon the season and region under consideration.
Title: Exploring the mixing of freshwater around Greenland in a high-resolution climate model using the freshwater transformation framework
Description:
In the sub-polar North Atlantic, perturbations to climatological mean freshwater fluxes can impact the strength of the climatically important Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, providing an impetus for us to try and understand the pathways of freshwater in the region.
In recent years, our understanding of the climatological mean horizontal pathways of freshwater through Greenland’s boundary current systems and out of the sub-polar North Atlantic have increased; however, we lack a thorough understanding of where freshwaters are destroyed by processes such as diahaline mixing.
In this study, I describe and use the freshwater transformation framework (based on the water mass transformation framework pioneered by Walin (1982)) to quantify how rates of diahaline mixing vary around Greenland with both season and region.
I demonstrate the framework using an eddy resolving coupled configuration of the ICON earth system model (5 km ocean, 10 km atmosphere).
Two patterns emerge:the destruction of fresh waters by mixing is stronger during wintertime than summertime;
the destruction of fresh waters by mixing is stronger off the coast of southern Greenland than Northern Greenland.
Using the freshwater transformation framework, I also explore the interplay of diahaline mixing with the salinification of boundary currents, surface sources of freshwater, and the storage of low salinity water in different regions.
I find that different processes dominate the climatological mean freshwater balance depending upon the season and region under consideration.
Related Results
“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
Climate Change and Children
Australian children are uniquely situated in a vast landscape that varies drastically across locations. Spanning multiple climatic zones—from cool tempe...
Pathways and impacts of increased Greenland and Arctic freshwater fluxes to the Subpolar North Atlantic
Pathways and impacts of increased Greenland and Arctic freshwater fluxes to the Subpolar North Atlantic
In the coming decades, climate change is expected to lead to increasing freshwater input to the subpolar North Atlantic from Greenland and the Arctic. This could affect the ocean c...
Climate and Culture
Climate and Culture
Climate is, presently, a heatedly discussed topic. Concerns about the environmental, economic, political and social consequences of climate change are of central interest in academ...
Moisture sources for Greenland ice core sites: Seasonality and land/ocean contributions
Moisture sources for Greenland ice core sites: Seasonality and land/ocean contributions
<div>
<div>The interpretation of the climate ice core isotope signal relies on the knowledge on the underlying moisture transport and variability hereof...
Preliminary landslide mapping in Greenland
Preliminary landslide mapping in Greenland
The landslide of 17 June 2017 in Karrat Fjord, central West Greenland, highlighted the need for a better understanding of landslides and landslide-generated tsunamis in Greenland a...
Categorisation of the length of bowhead whales from British Arctic whaling records
Categorisation of the length of bowhead whales from British Arctic whaling records
British whalers were the first and last from Europe to hunt bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus) commercially from the Arctic whaling grounds of the Greenland Sea (East Greenland-Sv...
Natural variability and recent warming in central Greenland ice cores
Natural variability and recent warming in central Greenland ice cores
<p>Climate variability of the Arctic region has been investigated by means of temperature reconstructions based on proxies from various climate archives around the Ar...
Chemical Distribution Patterns across the west Greenland Shelf: The Roles of Ocean Currents, Sea Ice Melt, and Freshwater Runoff
Chemical Distribution Patterns across the west Greenland Shelf: The Roles of Ocean Currents, Sea Ice Melt, and Freshwater Runoff
The west Greenland shelf is a dynamic marine environment influenced by various physicochemical and biological processes. We captured a high-resolution, large-scale snapshot of vari...

