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Convection in the central Irminger Sea; insights into variability and the roles of surface forcing and stratification from 19 years of high resolution mooring data
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  • Marieke Femke de Jong,
  • Kristen E Fogaren,
  • Isabela Alexander-Astiz Le Bras,
  • Leah Trafford McRaven,
  • Hilary Ilana Palevsky
Marieke Femke de Jong
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research NIOZ

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Kristen E Fogaren
Boston College
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Isabela Alexander-Astiz Le Bras
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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Leah Trafford McRaven
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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Hilary Ilana Palevsky
Boston College, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
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Abstract

Transformation of light to dense waters by atmospheric cooling is key to the Atlantic Meridional Overturning in the Subpolar Gyre. Convection in the center of the Irminger Gyre determines the transformation of the densest waters east of Greenland. We present a 19-year (2002-2020) weekly time series of hydrography and convection in the central Irminger Sea based on (bi-)daily mooring profiles supplemented with Argo profiles. A 70-year annual time series of shipboard hydrography shows that this mooring period is representative of longer term variability. The depth of convection varies strongly from winter to winter (288-1500 dbar), with a mean March climatogical mixed layer depth of 470 dbar and a mean maximum density reached of 27.70 ± 0.05 kg m-3. The densification of the water column by local convection directly impacts the sea surface height in the center of the Irminger Gyre and thus large-scale circulation patterns. Both the observations and a Price-Weller-Pinkel (PWP) mixed layer model analysis show that the main cause of interannual variability in mixed layer depth is the strength of the winter atmospheric surface forcing. Its role is three times as important as that of the strength of the maximum stratification in the preceeding summer. Strong stratification as a result of a fresh surface anomaly similar to the one observed in 2010 can weaken convection by approximately 170 m on average, but changes in surface forcing will need to be taken into account as well when considering the evolution of Irminger Sea convection under climate change.
08 Dec 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
10 Dec 2023Published in ESS Open Archive