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Supercooled Southern Ocean Waters

Authors :
Lynne D. Talley
F. Alexander Haumann
Annie P. S. Wong
R.M. Key
Robert Drucker
Kenneth S. Johnson
Stephen C. Riser
Lars Henrik Smedsrud
Earle A. Wilson
Ruth Moorman
Ted Maksym
Jorge L. Sarmiento
Source :
e2020GL090242, Geophysical Research Letters
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

In cold polar waters, temperatures sometimes drop below the freezing point, a process referred to as supercooling. However, observational challenges in polar regions limit our understanding of the spatial and temporal extent of this phenomenon. We here provide observational evidence that supercooled waters are much more widespread in the seasonally ice-covered Southern Ocean than previously reported. In 5.8% of all analyzed hydrographic profiles south of 55° S, we find temperatures below the surface freezing point (‘potential’ supercooling), and half of these have temperatures below the local freezing point (‘in-situ’ supercooling). Their occurrence doubles when neglecting measurement uncertainties. We attribute deep coastal-ocean supercooling to melting of Antarctic ice shelves, and surface-induced supercooling in the seasonal sea-ice region to winter-time sea-ice formation. The latter supercooling type can extend down to the permanent pycnocline due to convective sinking plumes—an important mechanism for vertical tracer transport and water-mass structure in the polar ocean.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
e2020GL090242, Geophysical Research Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5906f43d6b1862e0a8030af4630005d5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-186