Frontogenesis and Variability in Denmark Strait and Its Influence on Overflow Water

Author:

Spall Michael A.1,Pickart Robert S.1,Lin Peigen1,Appen Wilken-Jon von2,Mastropole Dana1,Valdimarsson H.3,Haine Thomas W. N.4,Almansi Mattia4

Affiliation:

1. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts

2. Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany

3. Marine and Freshwater Research Institute, Reykjavik, Iceland

4. The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

Abstract

AbstractA high-resolution numerical model, together with in situ and satellite observations, is used to explore the nature and dynamics of the dominant high-frequency (from one day to one week) variability in Denmark Strait. Mooring measurements in the center of the strait reveal that warm water “flooding events” occur, whereby the North Icelandic Irminger Current (NIIC) propagates offshore and advects subtropical-origin water northward through the deepest part of the sill. Two other types of mesoscale processes in Denmark Strait have been described previously in the literature, known as “boluses” and “pulses,” associated with a raising and lowering of the overflow water interface. Our measurements reveal that flooding events occur in conjunction with especially pronounced pulses. The model indicates that the NIIC hydrographic front is maintained by a balance between frontogenesis by the large-scale flow and frontolysis by baroclinic instability. Specifically, the temperature and salinity tendency equations demonstrate that the eddies act to relax the front, while the mean flow acts to sharpen it. Furthermore, the model reveals that the two dense water processes—boluses and pulses (and hence flooding events)—are dynamically related to each other and tied to the meandering of the hydrographic front in the strait. Our study thus provides a general framework for interpreting the short-time-scale variability of Denmark Strait Overflow Water entering the Irminger Sea.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Oceanography

Reference31 articles.

1. High-frequency variability in the circulation and hydrography of the Denmark Strait overflow from a high-resolution numerical model;Almansi;J. Phys. Oceanogr.,2017

2. Deep water movements in the North Atlantic as a link between climatic changes around Iceland and biological productivity of the English Channel and Celtic Sea;Cooper;J. Mar. Res.,1955

3. The era-interim reanalysis: Configuration and performance of the data assimilation system;Dee;Quart. J. Roy. Meteor. Soc.,2011

4. The production of North Atlantic Deep Water: Sources, rates and pathways;Dickson;J. Geophys. Res.,1994

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