We quantify Atlantic Water heat loss north of Svalbard using year-long hydrographic and current records from three moorings deployed across the Svalbard Branch of the Atlantic Water boundary current in 2012–2013. The boundary current loses annually on average 16W m−2 during the eastward propagation along the upper continental slope. The largest vertical fluxes of >100W m−2 occur episodically in autumn and early winter. Episodes of sea ice imported from the north in November 2012 and February 2013 coincided with large ocean-to-ice heat fluxes, which effectively melted the ice and sustained open water conditions in the middle of the Arctic winter. Between March and early July 2013, a persistent ice cover-modulated air-sea fluxes. Melti...
The Atlantic Water (AW) inflow is crucial for the heat and salt budget of the Arctic. This PhD thesi...
Measurements of ocean currents, stratification and microstructure were made in August 2015, northwes...
Poleward ocean heat transport is a key process in the earth system. We detail and review the northwa...
We quantify Atlantic Water heat loss north of Svalbard using year‐long hydrographic and current reco...
The Atlantic Water inflow to the Arctic Ocean is transformed and modified in the area north of Svalb...
The transport of warm Atlantic Waters north of Svalbard is one of the major heat and salt sources to...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Ame...
Sea ice concentration along the continental margin of the Arctic Ocean is influenced by a multitude ...
Sea ice loss in the Arctic Ocean has up to now been strongest during summer. In contrast, the sea ic...
Along the Atlantic water pathway, from the Gulf Stream in the south to the Arctic Ocean in the north...
A large amount of warm Atlantic water (AW) enters the Arctic as a boundary current through Fram Stra...
Atlantic Water (AW), the main source of heat and salt for the Arctic Ocean, undergoes large transfor...
Measurements of ocean currents, stratification and microstructure were made in August 2015, northwes...
The Atlantic Water (AW) inflow is crucial for the heat and salt budget of the Arctic. This PhD thesi...
Measurements of ocean currents, stratification and microstructure were made in August 2015, northwes...
Poleward ocean heat transport is a key process in the earth system. We detail and review the northwa...
We quantify Atlantic Water heat loss north of Svalbard using year‐long hydrographic and current reco...
The Atlantic Water inflow to the Arctic Ocean is transformed and modified in the area north of Svalb...
The transport of warm Atlantic Waters north of Svalbard is one of the major heat and salt sources to...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Ame...
Sea ice concentration along the continental margin of the Arctic Ocean is influenced by a multitude ...
Sea ice loss in the Arctic Ocean has up to now been strongest during summer. In contrast, the sea ic...
Along the Atlantic water pathway, from the Gulf Stream in the south to the Arctic Ocean in the north...
A large amount of warm Atlantic water (AW) enters the Arctic as a boundary current through Fram Stra...
Atlantic Water (AW), the main source of heat and salt for the Arctic Ocean, undergoes large transfor...
Measurements of ocean currents, stratification and microstructure were made in August 2015, northwes...
The Atlantic Water (AW) inflow is crucial for the heat and salt budget of the Arctic. This PhD thesi...
Measurements of ocean currents, stratification and microstructure were made in August 2015, northwes...
Poleward ocean heat transport is a key process in the earth system. We detail and review the northwa...