Journal article Open Access

The Impact of an Intense Cyclone on Short-Term Sea Ice Loss in a Fully Coupled Atmosphere-Ocean-Ice Model

James D. Doyle; E. Joseph Metzger; Peter M. Finocchio; William A. Komaromi; Daniel P. Stern; Neil P Barton

AbstractArctic cyclones may be associated with periods of locally enhanced sea ice loss during the summer, and some studies have found that an intense cyclone in August 2012 resulted in a rapid sea ice retreat. This study uses a coupled atmosphere‐ocean‐ice model (Navy‐ESPC) to explore the relationship between the 2012 cyclone and short‐term sea ice melting. There are two mechanisms of cyclone‐induced melting in Navy‐ESPC: turbulent mixing of a warm layer located at 15‐ to 35‐m depth increases bottom melting and warm air advection by the strong surface winds increases surface melting. Although the rate of sea ice melt is substantially increased in association with the cyclone, this effect is confined to a relatively small region and only lasts for a few days. There is no clear signature of the cyclone on the overall Arctic sea ice extent in Navy‐ESPC.

Files (23.6 MB)
Name Size
fulltext.pdf
md5:4125e78bd0f31841cd18752e4d1de1bf
23.6 MB Download
0
0
views
downloads
Views 0
Downloads 0
Data volume 0 Bytes
Unique views 0
Unique downloads 0

Share

Cite as