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Interfaces and Ocean Heat Flux derived from SIMBA_2015a and SIMBA_2015f data during N-ICE campaign in winter 2015.

We defined the interfaces between the air/snow, snow/ice, and ice/ocean and calculated the ocean heat flux for two SIMBA recordings (SIMBA2015a and SIMBA_2015f) of repeated temperature profiles at 6h interval and 2cm vertical resolution, during N-ICE 2015 experiment floe1. The snow/ice interface is derived from the sharp contrast in the diffusivity proxy values between both media. The snow/ice interface does not change except for slush formation associated with flooding events. The air/snow interface is calculated using simultaneous information from the vertical gradient of the temperature and the standard deviation over 24, 48, and 72 h period. Snow accumulation of more than 10 centimeters happened at different time for the 2 SIMBA. The ice/ocean interface is estimated from temperature profiles alone since the winter sea-ice remains colder than the ocean. The ocean just below the ice is at or just above the freezing temperature (estimated from a near surface conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) sensor see Koenig et al. [2016]). The method detects (1) the first sensor, downward of the snow/ice interface, with a temperature above the ocean freezing temperature and (2) the last sensor in the ice with a temperature below the mean ocean temperature by at least twice the ocean temperature standard deviation in that profile. The ice/ocean interface is then defined as half way between the last sensor in the ice and the first sensor in the ocean. Note it take 3-4 days for the deployment hole to refreeze. Then the ice thickness remains constant up to 20 February when floe1 breaks. Simba_2015f stops working and SIMBA_2015a features basal melt events corresponding to temperature changes in the ocean. The consistency of the 3 interfaces estimate is validated with the thermal diffusivity proxy and the vertical and temporal derivatives of temperature. The ocean heat flux is derived from the latent heat flux which is directly proportional to the change in time of the ice/ocean interface depth and the conductive heat flux in the lower portion of the ice estimated 6 cm above the ice/ocean interface. The ocean heat flux values for SIMBA_2015a and SIMBA2015f range from -50 to 350 W/m2, and -50 to 150 W/m2 respectively, while the basal melt events associated with ocean temperature increase stand out in SIMBA_2015a.   The SIMBA data are available through the Norwegian Polar Institute’s data center (https://data.npolar.no/dataset/6ed9a8ca-95b0-43be-bedf-8176bf56da80) and the method of interface detection is thoroughly described in Provost et al. (2017). Note that all time series have been smoothed with a 36-h running mean.   Provost, C., N. Sennechael, J. Miguet, P. Itkin, A. Rosel, Z. Koenig, N. Villacieros-Robineau, and M. A. Granskog (2017), Observations of flooding and snow-ice formation in a thinner Arctic sea-ice regime during the N-ICE2015 campaign: Influence of basal ice melt and storms, J. Geophys. Res. Oceans, 122, 7115–7134, doi:10.1002/2016JC012011.

Important Note: This submission has been initially submitted to SEA

scieNtific Open data Edition (SEANOE) publication service and received the recorded DOI.

The metadata elements have been further processed (refined) in EMODnet

Ingestion Service in order to conform with the Data Submission Service

specifications.

Simple

Date ( Creation )
2015-07-15
Date ( Revision )
2019-12-09
Date ( Publication )
2021-12-16
Date ( Publication )
Identifier
a53ad03f-3539-5393-3937-000000059709
Unique resource identifier
DOI:10.17882/59709
Other citation details
Sennechael Nathalie, Provost Christine (2015). Interfaces and Ocean Heat Flux derived from SIMBA_2015a and SIMBA_2015f data during N-ICE campaign in winter 2015. SEANOE. https://doi.org/10.17882/59709
Publisher
  SEA scieNtific Open data Edition -
By address: IFREMER / IDM / SISMER - Scientific Information Systems for the SEA, IFREMER Centre de Bretagne, ZI Pointe du diable CS 10070 , PLOUZANE , 29280 , France
https://www.seanoe.org/
Dataset Holding Organisation
  Ifremer, Scientific Information Systems for the sea -

IFREMER Centre de Bretagne

ZI Pointe du diable

CS 10070

, PLOUZANE , 29280 , France
http://data.ifremer.fr/SISMER
Author
  Ifremer, Scientific Information Systems for the sea -

IFREMER Centre de Bretagne

ZI Pointe du diable

CS 10070

, PLOUZANE , 29280 , France
http://data.ifremer.fr/SISMER
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0 ( Theme )
  • Oceanographic geographical features
SeaVoX salt and fresh water body gazetteer ( Place )
  • Arctic Ocean
SeaDataNet Agreed Parameter Groups ( Theme )
  • Water column temperature and salinity
  • Meteorology
  • Fluxes
SeaDataNet device categories ( instrument )
  • Sea ice remote sensors
SeaDataNet Parameter Discovery Vocabulary ( Theme )
  • Heat fluxes between the water column and the atmosphere
  • Other meteorological measurements
  • Temperature of the water column
SeaVoX Platform Categories ( platform )
  • research vessel
MEDIN data format categories ( featureType )
  • Network Common Data Form
Keywords
Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
no limitations to public access
Use limitation
Conditions for access and use apply
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
CC-BY 4.0
Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Oceans
Begin date
2015-01-15
End date
2015-03-16
N
S
E
W
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Supplemental Information
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-45574-5
Supplemental Information
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2016JC012424
Unique resource identifier
WGS 1984

Spatial representation info

No information provided.
Distribution format
  • Network Common Data Form ( 1 )

OnLine resource
https://cloud.emodnet-ingestion.eu/index.php/s/R6uphof3dOdLC8N ( WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download )
Protocol
WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link
Function
Information
Hierarchy level
Dataset

Conformance result

Date ( Publication )
2010-12-08
Explanation
See the referenced specification
Pass
No

Conformance result

Date ( Publication )
2010-12-08
Explanation
See the referenced specification
Pass
No

Conformance result

Date ( Publication )
2010-12-08
Explanation
See the referenced specification
Pass
No
Statement

Processed data|We defined the interfaces between the air/snow, snow/ice, and ice/ocean and calculated the ocean heat flux for two SIMBA recordings (SIMBA2015a and SIMBA_2015f) of repeated temperature profiles at 6h interval and 2cm vertical resolution, during N-ICE 2015 experiment floe1.

The snow/ice interface is derived from the sharp contrast in the diffusivity proxy values between both media. The snow/ice interface does not change except for slush formation associated with flooding events.

The air/snow interface is calculated using simultaneous information from the vertical gradient of the temperature and the standard deviation over 24, 48, and 72 h period. Snow accumulation of more than 10 centimeters happened at different time for the 2 SIMBA.

The ice/ocean interface is estimated from temperature profiles alone since the winter sea-ice remains colder than the ocean. The ocean just below the ice is at or just above the freezing temperature (estimated from a near surface conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) sensor see Koenig et al. [2016]). The method detects (1) the first sensor, downward of the snow/ice interface, with a temperature above the ocean freezing temperature and (2) the last sensor in the ice with a temperature below the mean ocean temperature by at least twice the ocean temperature standard deviation in that profile. The ice/ocean interface is then defined as half way between the last sensor in the ice and the first sensor in the ocean. Note it take 3-4 days for the deployment hole to refreeze. Then the ice thickness remains constant up to 20 February when floe1 breaks. Simba_2015f stops working and SIMBA_2015a features basal melt events corresponding to temperature changes in the ocean.

The consistency of the 3 interfaces estimate is validated with the thermal diffusivity proxy and the vertical and temporal derivatives of temperature.

The ocean heat flux is derived from the latent heat flux which is directly proportional to the change in time of the ice/ocean interface depth and the conductive heat flux in the lower portion of the ice estimated 6 cm above the ice/ocean interface. The ocean heat flux values for SIMBA_2015a and SIMBA2015f range from -50 to 350 W/m2, and -50 to 150 W/m2 respectively, while the basal melt events associated with ocean temperature increase stand out in SIMBA_2015a.

The SIMBA data are available through the Norwegian Polar Institute’s data center (https://data.npolar.no/dataset/6ed9a8ca-95b0-43be-bedf-8176bf56da80) and the method of interface detection is thoroughly described in Provost et al. (2017). Note that all time series have been smoothed with a 36-h running mean.

Provost, C., N. Sennechael, J. Miguet, P. Itkin, A. Rosel, Z. Koenig, N. Villacieros-Robineau, and M. A. Granskog (2017), Observations of flooding and snow-ice formation in a thinner Arctic sea-ice regime during the N-ICE2015 campaign: Influence of basal ice melt and storms, J. Geophys. Res. Oceans, 122, 7115–7134, doi:10.1002/2016JC012011.

File identifier
a53ad03f-3539-5393-3937-000000059709 XML
Metadata language
en
Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Date stamp
2025-05-29T00:00:00
Metadata standard name
ISO 19115:2003/19139
Metadata standard version
1.0
Point of contact
  Sorbonne University - ( )
21 rue de l’École de médecine , Paris , 75006 , France
http://www.sorbonne-universite.fr/en
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

N
S
E
W
thumbnail


Keywords

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0
Oceanographic geographical features
SeaDataNet Agreed Parameter Groups
Fluxes Meteorology Water column temperature and salinity
SeaDataNet Parameter Discovery Vocabulary
Heat fluxes between the water column and the atmosphere Other meteorological measurements Temperature of the water column

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