Role of sea ice in air-sea exchange and its relation to sea fog

Simei, Xie and Chenglan, Bao and Dezhong, Jiang and Bin, Zou (2001) Role of sea ice in air-sea exchange and its relation to sea fog. Advances in Polar Science, 12 (2). pp. 119-132.

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Abstract

Synchronous or quasi-synchronous stereoscopic sea-ice-air comprehensive observation was conducted during the First China Arctic Expedition in summer of 1999. Based on these data, the role of sea ice in sea-air exchange was studied. The study shows that the kinds, distribution and thickness of sea ice and their variation significantly influence the air-sea heat exchange. In floating ice area, the heat momentum transferred from ocean to atmosphere is in form of latent heat; latent heat flux is closely related to floating ice concentration; if floating ice is less, the heat flux would be larger. Latent heat flux is about 21 - 23.6 W * m(-2), which is greater than sensible heat flux. On ice field or giant floating ice, heat momentum transferred from atmosphere to sea ice or snow surface is in form of sensible heat. In the floating ice area or polynya, sea-air exchange is the most active, and also the most sensible for climate. Also this area is the most important condition for the creation of Arctic vapor fog. The heat exchange of a large-scale vapor fog process of about 500000 km(2) on Aug. 21 - 22, 1999 was calculated; the heat momentum transferred from ocean to air was about 14.8 x 10(9) kW. There are various kinds of sea fog, radiation fog, vapor fog and advection fog, forming in the Arctic Ocean in summer. One important cause is the existence of sea ice and its resultant complexity of both underlying surface and sea-air exchange.

Item Type: Article
Related URLs:
    Keywords: Arctic sea ice, ice-air-sea interaction, Arctic sea fog.
    Subjects: Unspecified
    Organizations: Unspecified
    Date Deposited: 04 May 2023 09:39
    URI: http://library.arcticportal.org/id/eprint/2224

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