The life cycle of the low salinity lenses at the surface of the Arctic
Ocean
- Clément Van Straaten,
- Camille Lique,
- Nicolas Kolodziejcyk
Camille Lique
Laboratoire d'Océanographie Physique et Spatiale
Author ProfileAbstract
In the Arctic Ocean, coherent low salinity anomalies, known as lenses,
and often observed at the surface and are thought to result from the
input of large amount of freshwater by sea ice melting and river runoff.
In this study, we analyze 20 years of a simulation performed with a high
resolution ocean-sea ice regional model of the Arctic to perform a
systematic detection of these lenses and track their displacements in
order to gain a better understanding of their life cycle. Lenses are
primarily formed during summer in response to sea ice melt, river
discharge, or are associated with mesoscale eddies. They are then able
to survive for weeks to months, travelling long distance across the
basin as their characteristic surface salinity anomalies get eroded
through vertical processes. After their formation, the lenses are
associated with larger sea ice melting flux during summer, and in winter
sea ice formation is intensified on top of the lenses. Over the 20-year
period, the number and size of the lenses have increased over the Arctic
Ocean, and the formation locations have shifted following the retreat of
the sea ice edge in regions such as Greenland, Barents, and Chukchi
seas. Our results suggest that these localized, intermittent and
coherent lenses may be important for the large scale Arctic dynamics and
the ocean-sea ice interaction.19 Aug 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 19 Aug 2024Published in ESS Open Archive