Winter intrusions of Atlantic Water in Kongsfjorden: oceanic
preconditioning and atmospheric triggering
Abstract
Kongsfjorden is an Arctic fjord in Svalbard, which is largely influenced
by the West Spitsbergen Current (WSC), transporting warm and salty
Atlantic Water (AW) into the Arctic. The geostrophic control typically
prevents AW from entering the fjord in winter, whereas energetic wind
events develop the Spitsbergen Trough Current (STC), ultimately flooding
fjords facing the West Spitsbergen Shelf with AW. However, an exhaustive
understanding of the interplay between these two opposite mechanisms and
a clear knowledge of conditions leading to AW winter intrusions are
still lacking. In this study, observational and reanalysis data show
that wind reversal events trigger AW intrusions, while the ocean density
is a key preconditioning factor limiting the occurrence of AW intrusions
to specific winters only. Wind reversals are strong southerly wind
events linked to the setup of a high pressure anomaly over the Barents
Sea, followed by a circulation reversal with northerly winds. Winters
with AW intrusions feature fresher and less dense fjord waters compared
to AW, resulting in the breakdown of the geostrophic control mechanism
at the fjord mouth, which opens the fjord to waters advected from the
WSC by wind reversals. The low salinity signal is consistent with a
large freshwater production through summer Arctic sea-ice melting in the
Barents Sea. Another mechanism is observed only in winter 2014: southern
winds blew continuously for two months and transported surface AW from
the WSC to the fjord, eventually forcing AW to intrude near the surface,
on top of denser local waters.