Abstract
The sea surface temperature (SST) is one of the essential parameters to
understand the climate change in the Arctic. Saildrone, an advanced
autonomous surface vehicle (ASV), has proven to be a useful tool for
providing sufficiently accurate SST data at high latitudes. Here, data
from two Saildrones, deployed in the Arctic in the summer of 2019, are
used to investigate the diurnal variability of upper ocean thermal
structure. An empirical cool skin effect model with dependence on the
wind speed with new coefficients was generated. Several local large
diurnal warming events were observed, the amplitudes of warming in the
skin layer > 5 K, rarely reported in previous studies.
Furthermore, the warming signals could persist beyond one day. For those
cases, it was found surface warm air suppressed the surface turbulent
heat loss to maintain the persistence of diurnal warming under low wind
conditions. Salinity also plays an important role in the formation of
upper ocean density stratification during diurnal warming at high
latitudes. A less salty surface layer was likely created by
precipitation or melting sea ice, providing favorable conditions for the
formation of upper ocean stratification. By comparing with two
prognostic diurnal warming models, the simulations match reasonably well
with those from the Saildrone for moderate wind speed conditions but
exhibit large differences at low winds. Both schemes show significant
negative biases in the early morning and late afternoon. It is necessary
to further improve the model schemes when applied at high latitudes.