Abstract

Abstract. During the EU research project Developing Arctic Modelling and Observing Capabilities for Long-term Environmental Studies (DAMOCLES), 18 ice buoys were deployed in the region of the Arctic transpolar drift (TPD). Sixteen of them formed a quadratic grid with 400 km side length. The measurements lasted from 2007 to 2009. The properties of the TPD and the impact of synoptic weather systems on the ice drift are analysed. Within the TPD, the speed increases by a factor of almost three from the North Pole to the Fram Strait region. The hourly buoy position fixes would show that the speed is underestimated by 10–20% if positions were taken at only 1–3 day intervals as it is usually done for satellite drift estimates. The geostrophic wind factor Ui / Ug (i.e. the ratio of ice speed Ui and geostrophic wind speed Ug), in the TPD amounts to 0.012 on average, but with regional and seasonal differences. The constant Ui / Ug relation breaks down for Ug < 5 m s−1. The impact of synoptic weather systems is studied applying a composite method. Cyclones (anticyclones) cause cyclonic (anticyclonic) vorticity and divergence (convergence) of the ice drift. The amplitudes are twice as large for cyclones as for anticyclones. The divergence caused by cyclones corresponds to a 0.1–0.5% per 6 h open water area increase based on the composite averages, but reached almost 4% within one day during a strong August 2007 storm. This storm also caused a long-lasting (over several weeks) rise of Ui and Ui / Ug and changed the ice conditions in a way which allowed large amplitudes of inertial ice motion. The consequences of an increasing Arctic storm activity for the ice cover are discussed.

Highlights

  • The transpolar drift (TPD) is, together with the Beaufort gyre, one of the two large systems of sea-ice drift and nearsurface currents in the Arctic Ocean

  • Apart from the winter period when PAWS G got stuck in the pack ice north of Greenland, all buoys show an acceleration of the TPD from the region around the North Pole to the Fram Strait and the East Greenland Current

  • Within the DAMOCLES research project, 18 ice buoys were deployed in the region of the TPD

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Summary

Introduction

The transpolar drift (TPD) is, together with the Beaufort gyre, one of the two large systems of sea-ice drift and nearsurface currents in the Arctic Ocean. The September ice extent minimum is mainly the integral result of the Fram Strait ice export and the summertime ice melt which depends on many factors such as the conditions at the end of winter of ice thickness and concentration, the ocean temperature, the solar insolation, which is closely related to cloud cover, and the warm-air advection from the surrounding land areas in summer. The latter are strongly controlled by synoptic pressure systems.

The DAMOCLES ice-buoy campaigns
Drift characteristics
Wind-drift relation
Impact of synoptic systems: cyclones and anticyclones
The storm of 13 August 2007
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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