Does the East Greenland Current exist in the northern Fram Strait?
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Published:2018-09-27
Issue:5
Volume:14
Page:1147-1165
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ISSN:1812-0792
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Container-title:Ocean Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Ocean Sci.
Author:
Richter Maren ElisabethORCID, von Appen Wilken-JonORCID, Wekerle Claudia
Abstract
Abstract. Warm Atlantic Water (AW) flows around the Nordic Seas in a cyclonic boundary
current loop. Some AW enters the Arctic Ocean where it is transformed to
Arctic Atlantic Water (AAW) before exiting through the Fram Strait. There the AAW
is joined by recirculating AW. Here we present the first summer synoptic
study targeted at resolving this confluence in the Fram Strait which forms the
East Greenland Current (EGC). Absolute geostrophic velocities and hydrography
from observations in 2016, including four sections crossing the east
Greenland shelf break, are compared to output from an eddy-resolving
configuration of the sea ice–ocean model FESOM. Far offshore (120 km at
80.8∘ N) AW warmer than 2 ∘C is found in the northern Fram
Strait. The Arctic Ocean outflow there is broad and barotropic, but gets
narrower and more baroclinic toward the south as recirculating AW increases
the cross-shelf-break density gradient. This barotropic to baroclinic
transition appears to form the well-known EGC boundary current flowing along
the shelf break farther south where it has been previously described. In this
realization, between 80.2 and 76.5∘ N, the southward transport along
the east Greenland shelf break increases from roughly 1 Sv to about 4 Sv and
the proportion of AW to AAW also increases fourfold from 19±8 % to
80±3 %. Consequently, in the southern Fram Strait, AW can propagate
into the Norske Trough on the east Greenland shelf and reach the large
marine-terminating glaciers there. High instantaneous variability observed in both
the synoptic data and the model output is attributed to eddies, the
representation of which is crucial as they mediate the westward transport of
AW in the recirculation and thus structure the confluence forming the EGC.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy
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