John Marshall

Professor of Ocean and Climate Science

Understanding Arctic Ocean Circulation: A Review of Ocean Dynamics in a Changing Climate

Understanding Arctic Ocean Circulation: A Review of Ocean Dynamics in a Changing Climate.

(Timmermans, M.L. and Marshall, J.), JGR Oceans, vol. 125, no. 4, 2020.

Abstract

The Arctic Ocean is a focal point of climate change, with ocean warming, freshening, sea‐ice decline, and circulation that link to the changing atmospheric and terrestrial environment. Major features of the Arctic and the interconnected nature of its wind‐ and buoyancy‐driven circulation are reviewed here by presenting a synthesis of observational data interpreted from the perspective of geophysical fluid dynamics (GFD). The general circulation is seen to be the superposition of Atlantic Water flowing into and around the Arctic basin and the two main wind‐driven circulation features of the interior stratified Arctic Ocean: the Transpolar Drift Stream and the Beaufort Gyre. The specific drivers of these systems, including wind forcing, ice‐ocean interactions, and surface buoyancy fluxes, and their associated GFD are explored. The essential understanding guides an assessment of how Arctic Ocean structure and dynamics might fundamentally change as the Arctic warms, sea‐ice cover declines, and the ice that remains becomes more mobile.

doi = 10.1029/2018JC014378