Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2023

Presentation information

[J] Oral

A (Atmospheric and Hydrospheric Sciences ) » A-CG Complex & General

[A-CG46] Science in the Arctic Region

Wed. May 24, 2023 10:45 AM - 12:00 PM 103 (International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Tomoki Morozumi(National Institute for Environmental Studies), Rigen Shimada(Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency), Masatake Hori(University of Tokyo, Atmosphere Ocean Research Institute), Tatsuya Kawakami(Hokkaido University), Chairperson:Tomoki Morozumi(National Institute for Environmental Studies), Tatsuya Kawakami(Hokkaido University), Rigen Shimada(Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency)

10:45 AM - 11:00 AM

[ACG46-01] Water modification in the Barents Sea in a high-resolution ice-ocean model

*Takao Kawasaki1, Yoshiki Komuro2, Jun Ono2 (1.Atmosphere and Ocean Research Insitutute, the University of Tokyo, 2.Institute of Arctic Climate and Environment Research, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology)

Keywords:Barents Sea, Ocean modeling, Water formation

Barents Sea Water (BSW) inflows to the intermediate layer in the Arctic Ocean and has impacts on the sea ice and climate system in the Arctic region. A lack of understanding of the mechanisms of BSW formation and inflow processes causes the bias of temperature and salinity in the Arctic Ocean even in state-of-art climate models. The Barents Sea Water is formed by the modification of the Atlantic Water caused by the sea surface cooling and mixing with the surface Polar Water. The quantitative estimate of the formation of Barents Sea Water is conducted by an ocean model.
An ice-ocean general circulation model named COCO is utilized in this study. The horizontal grid size spatially varies by placing the poles of the general curvilinear horizontal coordinates close to the Barents Sea. The horizontal grid size is 2-8 km in the Barents Sea. The model is integrated from 1980 to 2020 under the 3-hourly sea surface condition dataset (JRA55-do). The nudging of sea surface salinity is not applied to represent freshening seawater in this model. The temperature, salinity, and their decreases in the Barents Sea are well reproduced in our model. Sea surface cooling is the dominant process in water modification in the southern Barents Sea. The cooled Atlantic Water gets buoyancy due to mixing with sea-ice melting water near the surface in the northern and northeastern Barents Sea. The decrease of the sea surface cooling in the southern Barents Sea and the warming of BSW inflowing the Arctic Ocean are simulated in the 2010s.