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Ice-Tethered Profiler observations of the double-diffusive staircase in the Canada Basin thermocline
Authors
Aagaard
Halle
+44 more
J. Toole
Johnson
Kelley
Kelley
Krishfield
Krishfield
Krishfield
M.-L. Timmermans
Marmorino
Maykut
McDougall
McDougall
McLaughlin
McPhee
McPhee
Morgan
Morison
Neal
Neal
Neshyba
Neshyba
Nikolopoulos
Oakey
P. Winsor
Padman
Padman
Padman
Padman
Perkin
Perovich
Perovich
R. Krishfield
Radko
Radko
Rainville
Rudels
Schmitt
Schmitt
Serreze
Shimada
Timmermans
Toole
Turner
Woodgate
Publication date
17 December 2008
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2008. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 113 (2008): C00A02, doi:10.1029/2008JC004829.Six Ice-Tethered Profilers (ITP), deployed in the central Canada Basin of the Arctic Ocean between 2004 and 2007, have provided detailed potential temperature and salinity measurements of a double-diffusive staircase at about 200–300 m depth. Individual layers in the staircase are of order 1 m in vertical height but appear to extend horizontally for hundreds of kilometers, with along-layer gradients of temperature and salinity tightly related. On the basis of laboratory-derived double-diffusive flux laws, estimated vertical heat fluxes through the staircase are in the range 0.05–0.3 W m−2, only about one tenth of the estimated mean surface mixed layer heat flux to the sea ice. It is thus concluded that the vertical transport of heat from the Atlantic Water in the central basin is unlikely to have a significant impact to the Canada Basin ocean surface heat budget. Icebreaker conductivity-temperature-depth data from the Beaufort Gyre Freshwater Experiment show that the staircase is absent at the basin periphery. Turbulent mixing that presumably disrupts the staircase might drive greater flux from the Atlantic Water at the basin boundaries and possibly dominate the regionally averaged heat flux.Funding for construction and deployment of the prototype ITPs was provided by the National Science Foundation Oceanographic Technology and Interdisciplinary Coordination (OTIC) Program and Office of Polar Programs (OPP) under grant OCE-0324233. Continued support for the ITP field program and data analysis has been provided by the OPP Arctic Sciences Section under awards ARC-0519899, ARC-0631951, ARC-0713837, and internal WHOI funding
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