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Geophysical Research Letters | 2005

One more step toward a warmer Arctic

Igor V. Polyakov; Agnieszka Beszczynska; Eddy C. Carmack; Igor A. Dmitrenko; Eberhard Fahrbach; Ivan E. Frolov; Rüdiger Gerdes; Edmond Hansen; Jürgen Holfort; Vladimir V. Ivanov; Mark A. Johnson; Michael Karcher; Frank Kauker; James H. Morison; Kjell Arild Orvik; Ursula Schauer; Harper L. Simmons; Øystein Skagseth; Vladimir T. Sokolov; Michael Steele; Leonid Timokhov; David Walsh; John E. Walsh

This study was motivated by a strong warming signal seen in mooring-based and oceanographic survey data collected in 2004 in the Eurasian Basin of the Arctic Ocean. The source of this and earlier Arctic Ocean changes lies in interactions between polar and sub-polar basins. Evidence suggests such changes are abrupt, or pulse-like, taking the form of propagating anomalies that can be traced to higher-latitudes. For example, an anomaly found in 2004 in the eastern Eurasian Basin took ∼1.5 years to propagate from the Norwegian Sea to the Fram Strait region, and additional ∼4.5–5 years to reach the Laptev Sea slope. While the causes of the observed changes will require further investigation, our conclusions are consistent with prevailing ideas suggesting the Arctic Ocean is in transition towards a new, warmer state.


Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2010

Arctic Ocean Warming Contributes to Reduced Polar Ice Cap

Igor V. Polyakov; Leonid Timokhov; Vladimir A. Alexeev; Sheldon Bacon; Igor A. Dmitrenko; Louis Fortier; Ivan E. Frolov; Jean-Claude Gascard; Edmond Hansen; V. V. Ivanov; Seymour W. Laxon; C. Mauritzen; Donald K. Perovich; Koji Shimada; Harper L. Simmons; Vladimir T. Sokolov; Michael Steele; John M. Toole

Analysis of modern and historical observations demonstrates that the temperature of the intermediate-depth (150–900 m) Atlantic water (AW) of the Arctic Ocean has increased in recent decades. The AW warming has been uneven in time; a local 1°C maximum was observed in the mid-1990s, followed by an intervening minimum and an additional warming that culminated in 2007 with temperatures higher than in the 1990s by 0.24°C. Relative to climatology from all data prior to 1999, the most extreme 2007 temperature anomalies of up to 1°C and higher were observed in the Eurasian and Makarov Basins. The AW warming was associated with a substantial (up to 75–90 m) shoaling of the upper AW boundary in the central Arctic Ocean and weakening of the Eurasian Basin upper-ocean stratification. Taken together, these observations suggest that the changes in the Eurasian Basin facilitated greater upward transfer of AW heat to the ocean surface layer. Available limited observations and results from a 1D ocean column model support this surmised upward spread of AW heat through the Eurasian Basin halocline. Experiments with a 3D coupled ice–ocean model in turn suggest a loss of 28–35 cm of ice thickness after 50 yr in response to the 0.5 W m−2 increase in AW ocean heat flux suggested by the 1D model. This amount of thinning is comparable to the 29 cm of ice thickness loss due to local atmospheric thermodynamic forcing estimated from observations of fast-ice thickness decline. The implication is that AW warming helped precondition the polar ice cap for the extreme ice loss observed in recent years.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1997

Impact of eastern Arctic shelf waters on the Nansen Basin intermediate layers

Ursula Schauer; Robin D. Muench; Bert Rudels; Leonid Timokhov

The Eurasian shelves supply water to the Nansen Basin intermediate layers in two ways: as buoyancy-driven plumes of dense winter water and as permanent inflow of the Barents Sea branch of Atlantic Water. While the plumes are local and seasonal phenomena, the Barents Sea flow is part of the large-scale circulation. Both interact with Atlantic Water, which enters the Arctic Ocean through Fram Strait and moves as a subsurface boundary current eastward along the continental slope. During the Polarstern cruise ARK IX/4 in summer 1993, the Fram Strait branch was observed as a narrow core within tens of kilometers of the Barents Sea shelf edge. Here, several patches of cold, low-salinity water spread across the slope down to about 500 m depth. Their origin is assumed to be the northern Barents Sea. They mix with the warm, saline Fram Strait branch water (FSBW), so that the core properties of the latter become modified downstream. In the eastern Nansen Basin the Fram Strait branch is displaced toward the inner basin by inflow of the Barents Sea Branch of Atlantic Water (BSBW). This inflow appears as a broad (200 km) wedge extending from 200 to 1300 m depth. BSBW is colder and less saline than water of the Fram Strait branch, and it is less dense and less stratified than the ambient water. Both branches appear to undergo vigorous mixing while spreading eastward, so that any eastward continuation of the boundary flow transports about 50% BSBW and 50% FSBW above 600 m and about 80% BSBW and 20% FSBW below that level toward the Canadian Basin. According to available observations, the Barents and Kara Seas are the only source areas for shelf waters ventilating the Nansen Basin below the halocline, and these waters constitute a freshwater input rather than a salt input. Winter shelf water from the Laptev Sea cannot contribute to layers deeper than the upper halocline.


Journal of Climate | 2004

Variability of the intermediate Atlantic water of the Arctic Ocean over the last 100 years

Igor V. Polyakov; Genrikh Alekseev; Leonid Timokhov; Uma S. Bhatt; Roger L. Colony; Harper L. Simmons; David O. Walsh; John Walsh; V. F. Zakharov

Recent observations show dramatic changes of the Arctic atmosphere‐ice‐ocean system, including a rapid warming in the intermediate Atlantic water of the Arctic Ocean. Here it is demonstrated through the analysis of a vast collection of previously unsynthesized observational data, that over the twentieth century Atlantic water variability was dominated by low-frequency oscillations (LFO) on time scales of 50‐80 yr. Associated with this variability, the Atlantic water temperature record shows two warm periods in the 1930s‐40s and in recent decades and two cold periods earlier in the century and in the 1960s‐70s. Over recent decades, the data show a warming and salinification of the Atlantic layer accompanied by its shoaling and, probably, thinning. The estimate of the Atlantic water temperature variability shows a general warming trend; however, over the 100-yr record there are periods (including the recent decades) with short-term trends strongly amplified by multidecadal variations. Observational data provide evidence that Atlantic water temperature, Arctic surface air temperature, and ice extent and fast ice thickness in the Siberian marginal seas display coherent LFO. The hydrographic data used support a negative feedback mechanism through which changes of density act to moderate the inflow of Atlantic water to the Arctic Ocean, consistent with the decrease of positive Atlantic water temperature anomalies in the late 1990s. The sustained Atlantic water temperature and salinity anomalies in the Arctic Ocean are associated with hydrographic anomalies of the same sign in the Greenland‐Norwegian Seas and of the opposite sign in the Labrador Sea. Finally, it is found that the Arctic air‐sea‐ice system and the North Atlantic sea surface temperature display coherent low-frequency fluctuations. Elucidating the mechanisms behind this relationship will be critical to an understanding of the complex nature of low-frequency variability found in the Arctic and in lower-latitude regions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Toward a warmer Arctic Ocean: Spreading of the early 21st century Atlantic Water warm anomaly along the Eurasian Basin margins

Igor A. Dmitrenko; Igor V. Polyakov; Sergey Kirillov; Leonid Timokhov; Ivan E. Frolov; Vladimir T. Sokolov; Harper L. Simmons; Vladimir V. Ivanov; David Walsh

We document through the analysis of 2002–2005 observational data the recent Atlantic Water (AW) warming along the Siberian continental margin due to several AW warm impulses that penetrated into the Arctic Ocean through Fram Strait in 1999–2000. The AW temperature record from our long-term monitoring site in the northern Laptev Sea shows several events of rapid AW temperature increase totaling 0.8°C in February–August 2004. We hypothesize the along-margin spreading of this warmer anomaly has disrupted the downstream thermal equilibrium of the late 1990s to earlier 2000s. The anomaly mean velocity of 2.4–2.5 ± 0.2 cm/s was obtained on the basis of travel time required between the northern Laptev Sea and two anomaly fronts delineated over the Eurasian flank of the Lomonosov Ridge by comparing the 2005 snapshot along-margin data with the AW pre-1990 mean. The magnitude of delineated anomalies exceeds the level of pre-1990 mean along-margin cooling and rises above the level of noise attributed to shifting of the AW jet across the basin margins. The anomaly mean velocity estimation is confirmed by comparing mooring-derived AW temperature time series from 2002 to 2005 with the downstream along-margin AW temperature distribution from 2005. Our mooring current meter data corroborate these estimations.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Seasonal modification of the Arctic Ocean intermediate water layer off the eastern Laptev Sea continental shelf break

Igor A. Dmitrenko; Sergey Kirillov; Vladimir V. Ivanov; Rebecca A. Woodgate; Igor V. Polyakov; Nikolay V. Koldunov; Louis Fortier; Catherine Lalande; Lars Kaleschke; Dorothea Bauch; Jens Hölemann; Leonid Timokhov

up to 75% of the total variance. Our data suggest that the entire AW layer down to at least 840 m is affected by seasonal cycling, although the strength of the seasonal signal in temperature and salinity reduces from 260 m (±0.25C and ±0.025 psu) to 840 m (±0.05C and ±0.005 psu). The seasonal velocity signal is substantially weaker, strongly masked by high-frequency variability, and lags the thermohaline cycle by 45–75 days. We hypothesize that our mooring record shows a time history of the along-margin propagation of the AW seasonal signal carried downstream by the AW boundary current. Our analysis suggests that the seasonal signal in the Fram Strait Branch of AW (FSBW) at 260 m is predominantly translated from Fram Strait, while the seasonality in the Barents Sea branch of AW (BSBW) domain (at 840 m) is attributed instead to the seasonal signal input from the Barents Sea. However, the characteristic signature of the BSBW seasonal dynamics observed through the entire AW layer leads us to speculate that BSBW also plays a role in seasonally modifying the properties of the FSBW.


Journal of Climate | 2008

Arctic Ocean Freshwater Changes over the Past 100 Years and Their Causes

Igor V. Polyakov; Vladimir A. Alexeev; G. I. Belchansky; Igor A. Dmitrenko; V. V. Ivanov; Sergey Kirillov; A. A. Korablev; Michael Steele; Leonid Timokhov; I. Yashayaev

Abstract Recent observations show dramatic changes of the Arctic atmosphere–ice–ocean system. Here the authors demonstrate, through the analysis of a vast collection of previously unsynthesized observational data, that over the twentieth century the central Arctic Ocean became increasingly saltier with a rate of freshwater loss of 239 ± 270 km3 decade−1. In contrast, long-term (1920–2003) freshwater content (FWC) trends over the Siberian shelf show a general freshening tendency with a rate of 29 ± 50 km3 decade−1. These FWC trends are modulated by strong multidecadal variability with sustained and widespread patterns. Associated with this variability, the FWC record shows two periods in the 1920s–30s and in recent decades when the central Arctic Ocean was saltier, and two periods in the earlier century and in the 1940s–70s when it was fresher. The current analysis of potential causes for the recent central Arctic Ocean salinification suggests that the FWC anomalies generated on Arctic shelves (including a...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2011

Fate of early 2000s Arctic warm water pulse

Igor V. Polyakov; Vladimir A. Alexeev; Igor Ashik; Sheldon Bacon; Agnieszka Beszczynska-Möller; Eddy C. Carmack; Igor A. Dmitrenko; Louis Fortier; Jean-Claude Gascard; Edmond Hansen; Jens Hölemann; V. V. Ivanov; Takashi Kikuchi; Sergey Kirillov; Yueng-Djern Lenn; Fiona A. McLaughlin; Jan Piechura; Irina Repina; Leonid Timokhov; Waldemar Walczowski; Rebecca A. Woodgate

The water mass structure of the Arctic Ocean is remarkable, for its intermediate (depth range ~150–900 m) layer is filled with warm (temperature >0°C) and salty water of Atlantic origin (usually called the Atlantic Water, AW). This water is carried into and through the Arctic Ocean by the pan-Arctic boundary current, which moves cyclonically along the basins’ margins (Fig. 1). This system provides the largest input of water, heat, and salt into the Arctic Ocean; the total quantity of heat is substantial, enough to melt the Arctic sea ice cover several times over. By utilizing an extensive archive Fate of Early 2000s Arctic Warm Water Pulse of recently collected observational data, this study provides a cohesive picture of recent large-scale changes in the AW layer of the Arctic Ocean. These recent observations show the warm pulse of AW that entered the Arctic Ocean in the early 1990s finally reached the Canada Basin during the 2000s. The second warm pulse that entered the Arctic Ocean in the mid-2000s has moved through the Eurasian Basin and is en route downstream. One of the most intriguing results of these observations is the realization of the possibility of uptake of anomalous AW heat by overlying layers, with possible implications for an already-reduced Arctic ice cover.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2007

Observational program tracks Arctic Ocean transition to a warmer state

Igor V. Polyakov; Leonid Timokhov; Igor A. Dmitrenko; Vladimir V. Ivanov; Harper L. Simmons; Agnieszka Beszczynska-Möller; Robert R. Dickson; Eberhard Fahrbach; Louis Fortier; Jean-Claude Gascard; Jens Hölemann; N. Penny Holliday; Edmond Hansen; C. Mauritzen; Jan Piechura; Robert S. Pickart; Ursula Schauer; Waldemar Walczowski; Michael Steele

Over the past several decades, the Arctic Ocean has undergone substantial change. Enhanced transport of warmer air from lower latitudes has led to increased Arctic surface air temperature. Concurrent reductions in Arctic ice extent and thickness have been documented. The first evidence of warming in the intermediate Atlantic Water (AW, water depth between 150 and 900 meters) of the Arctic Ocean was found in 1990. Another anomaly, found in 2004, suggests that the Arctic Ocean is in transition toward a new, warmer state [Polyakov et al., 2005, and references therein].


Journal of Climate | 2012

Warming of the Intermediate Atlantic Water of the Arctic Ocean in the 2000s

Igor V. Polyakov; Andrey V. Pnyushkov; Leonid Timokhov

AbstractThis analysis evaluates the thermal state of the intermediate (depth range of 150–900 m) Atlantic Water (AW) of the Arctic Ocean, beginning in the 1950s and with particular focus on the transition from the 1990s to the 2000s and on changes during the 2000s. Using an extensive array of observations, the authors document AW warming trends across various time scales and demonstrate that the 2000s were exceptionally warm, with no analogy since the 1950s or probably in the history of instrumental observations in the Arctic Ocean. Warming in the recent decade was dominated by a warm AW pulse in addition to the underlying trend. Since 1997, the Canadian Basin experienced a faster warming rate compared with the Eurasian Basin. The relative role of the AW warmth in setting the net energy flux and mass balance of the Arctic sea ice is still under debate. Additional carefully orchestrated field experiments are required in order to address this question of ongoing Arctic climate change.

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Sergey Kirillov

Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute

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Jens Hölemann

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Igor V. Polyakov

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Jens A. Hoelemann

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Markus Janout

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Heidemarie Kassens

Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences

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Andrey Novikhin

Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute

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Thomas Krumpen

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Jörn Thiede

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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