Abstract

AbstractIn this study, we explore the mixed layer salinity (MLS) balance in the western Arctic Ocean based on the Arctic Subpolar gyre sTate Estimate (ASTE) results. The key components of the MLS budgets and their variabilities in response to the Beaufort Gyre (BG) spin‐up are identified. Seasonally, the surface forcing (brine rejection plus freshwater input) is the most important dominant contributor to the MLS balance. On the other hand, the entrainment dominates the interannual variability of MLS tendency inside the BG, while the advection dominates that in the Beaufort Sea. The sensitivity test of increased river discharge revealed a greater role of the advection term, along with weakened contributions from the surface forcing and entrainment, in determining the interannual variability of MLS balance. In contrast, the seasonal variabilities remained largely unchanged. The Lagrangian particle tracking reveals that the majority of BG freshwater within the mixed layer exits through the Canadian Archipelago prior to the BG spin‐up (2002–2006) and during its relaxation (2012–2017). We found a reduction in mixed layer freshwater sources from the external BG that could feed the gyre during its spin‐up (2007–2011), with the major contributions coming from the Beaufort Sea and the BG region itself through Ekman convergence. The mixed layer freshwater pathways are similar in the two versions of ASTE, but with noticeable proportion changes with the increasing river discharge.

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