This data set includes conductivity, temperature, and depth (CTD) measurements along with thermal microstructure data (such as, turbulent thermal variance, turbulent kinetic energy, and vertical temperature gradient) collected from 12 October 1997 to 30 September 1998. The storage, redistribution, and ultimate release of the energy contributed by incoming shortwave radiation has major effects on the thickness and seasonal evolution of sea ice cover and the state of the upper ocean. As part of the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic (SHEBA) project, this research was designed to (1) investigate upper ocean processes and their role in ice-albedo feedback, and (2) develop and test suitable models or parameterizations for use in large-scale simulations.
Data are in space-delimited ASCII text format and are available via FTP.
Stanton, T., and B. Shaw. 2006. SHEBA upper ocean CTD and thermal microstructure, Western Arctic Ocean. Boulder, Colorado USA: National Center for Atmospheric Research, ARCSS Data Archive.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Data format | Space-delimited ASCII text format |
Spatial coverage and resolution | Southernmost Latitude: 74.6° N Horizontal resolution is 1 km and smaller. Depth resolution is 0.5 m for the CTD data 1 m for the microstructure data. |
Temporal coverage and resolution | 12 October 1997 to 30 September 1998, ranging from 15-minute intervals to daily |
File naming convention | See File and Directory Structure for a list of file names and descriptions. |
File size | Approximately 3 KB to 131 MB. |
Parameters | Conductivity, temperature, depth, salinity, turbulent thermal variance, turbulent kinetic energy |
Procedures for obtaining data | Data are available for ordering through NCAR. |
1. Contacts and Acknowledgments
2. Detailed Data Description
3. Data Access and Tools
4. Data Acquisition and Processing
5. References and Related Publications
6. Document Information
Timothy Stanton
Oceanography Department
Naval Postgraduate School
1833 Dyer Road
Monterey, CA 93943
USA
Bill Shaw
Oceanography Department
Naval Postgraduate School
1833 Dyer Road
Monterey, CA 93943
USA
This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) Office of Polar Programs (OPP) Arctic Sciences Section (ARC) grants 9701391 and 0084296.
Investigators converted the data from MATLAB format to space-delimited ASCII text format.
Directory | File Name | File Size | Description and Units | Dimensions (rows x columns) |
clipon_daily | 354 daily-averaged, 1 m down-going 1 m binned clipon/CTD data, 12350 vertical profiles | |||
chi.txt | 829 KB | Rate of dissipation of turbulent thermal variance (K2/s) | 150 x 354 | |
doy.txt | 5.53 KB | Time (day of year, 1997) | 1 x 354 | |
dTdz.txt | 829 KB | Vertical gradient of temperature on the same vertical spatial scales as the dissipation estimates chi and epsilon (K/m) | 150 x 354 | |
epsilon.txt | 829 KB | Rate of dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy (m2/s3) | 150 x 354 | |
lat.txt | 5.53 KB | Latitude (degrees) | 1 x 354 | |
lon.txt | 5.53 KB | Longitude (degrees) | 1 x 354 | |
S.txt | 830 KB | Salinity (psu) | 150 x 12350 | |
T.txt | 829 KB | Temperature (°C) | 150 x 12350 | |
z.txt | 2.49 KB | Depth (m) | 150 x 1 | |
clipon_proc | Down- and up-going 1 m binned clipon/CTD data, 12350 vertical profiles | |||
chi.txt | 28.2 MB | Rate of dissipation of turbulent thermal variance (K2/s) | 150 x 12350 | |
doy.txt | 192 KB | Time (day of year, 1997) | 1 x 12350 | |
dTdz.txt | 2.2 MB | Vertical gradient of temperature on the same vertical spatial scales as the dissipation estimates chi and epsilon (K/m) | 150 x 12350 | |
epsilon.txt | 28.2 MB | Rate of dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy (m2/s3) | 150 x 12350 | |
lat.txt | 192 KB | Latitude (degrees) | 1 x 12350 | |
lon.txt | 192 KB | Longitude (degrees) | 1 x 12350 | |
S.txt | 28.2 MB | Salinity (psu) | 150 x 12350 | |
T.txt | 28.2 MB | Temperature (°C) | 150 x 12350 | |
z.txt | 2.49 KB | Depth (m) | 150 x 1 | |
ctd_proc | Down- and up-going 0.5 m binned CTD data, 24825 vertical profiles | |||
doy.txt | 387 KB | Time (day of year, 1997) | 1 x 24825 | |
lat.txt | 387 KB | Latitude (degrees) | 1 x 24825 | |
lon.txt | 387 KB | Longitude (degrees) | 1 x 24825 | |
S.txt | 128 MB | Salinity (psu) | 301 x 24825 | |
T.txt | 128 MB | Temperature (°C) | 301 x 24825 | |
transmission.txt | 128 MB | Beam attenuation coefficient in the spectral band (λ = 660 nm) | 301 x 24825 | |
z.txt | 5.64 KB | Depth (m) | 301 x 1 |
Southernmost Latitude: 74.6° N
Northernmost Latitude: 80.3° N
Westernmost Longitude: 168° W
Easternmost Longitude: 143° W
Horizontal resolution is 1 km and smaller. Depth resolution is 0.5 m for the CTD data 1 m for the microstructure data.
Investigators collected these data from 12 October 1997 to 30 September 1998.
Data were collected at intervals that ranged from 15 minutes in length to once daily.
This data set includes measurements of conductivity, temperature, depth, salinity, turbulent thermal variance, turbulent kinetic energy, and vertical temperature gradient.
Data are available for ordering through NCAR.
The entire data set is approximately 533 MB.
Incoming shortwave radiation (Fr), which passes through the ice cover and is absorbed in the water, is the key element in interactions between the ice and upper ocean. The storage, redistribution, and ultimate release of this energy to the ice has major effects not only on the thickness and seasonal evolution of the ice cover, but also on the state of the upper ocean. Shortwave energy enters the ocean primarily through leads, areas of thin ice, and melt ponds. A theoretical analysis showed that a large fraction of Fr entering the leads is absorbed beneath the bottom of the ice and does not contribute directly to lateral melting. Instead, much of the energy goes to increasing the oceanic heat flux at the underside of the ice (Fw), producing a positive feedback between decreasing ice thickness and increasing Fw.
Because they lacked data, it was not possible for investigators to determine how much of Fr contributed to lateral melting and how much went to Fw, nor could they conclude anything specific about the residence time of shortwave energy in the water. In subsequent field measurements they discovered the presence of laminar sublayers at the underside of the ice, which inhibit the rate at which heat can be transferred from the water to the ice. The significance of these layers was demonstrated by mid-summer observations in a dynamically active portion of the Marginal Ice Zone, which revealed a substantial buildup of heat with time in the upper 20 m of the water column. The observations showed that solar heating rates in the mixed layer can exceed heat losses due to Fw and lateral melting, even when ice concentration is relatively high (80-90%) and vertical mixing is strong. Summer accumulation of heat in the mixed layer was also found in oceanographic data from AIDJEX (Arctic Ice Dynamics Joint Experiment). Reanalysis of these data (Maykut and McPhee, 1995) indicated that Fw is strongly seasonal, with maximum values reaching 40-60 W*m-2 in August. Further, it was shown that Fw must have been derived almost entirely from shortwave radiation rather than from diffusion of heat from warmer water below the mixed layer.
Efforts to treat the effects of solar heating in the polar oceans have long been hampered by lack of suitable data. With this problem in mind, SHEBA was carefully designed to provide comprehensive and simultaneous data on the following:
The instrumentation on the system consisted of the following:
The FP07s were mounted to extend below the cage of the CTD and are referred to below as the clipon package. The CTD outputs were sampled at 24 Hz and the FP07s were sampled at 188 Hz.
Investigators deployed a profiling CTD and thermal microstructure system using an automated winch as part of the upper ocean measurement program of the SHEBA project. The instrument package cycled from the surface to a depth of approximately 150 m at a rate of approximately 30 cm/s at a nominal interval of one cast every 15 minutes. The system was in operation from 12 October 1997 to 30 September 1998. Typically, the system was running continuously for about half of each day, although there were 21 days when no data were obtained. In total, 12350 casts were made for an average of nearly 35 casts per day.
For each cast, the best-performing conductivity/temperature pair and fast-response thermistor records were chosen (based on degree of correlation with casts adjacent in time) and obvious outliers were removed. Salinity and density were calculated using standard procedures. Rates of dissipation of turbulent thermal variance and turbulent kinetic energy were obtained by making two-parameter fits of the Batchelor theoretical spectrum to spectra of the fast-response temperature gradient over 1 m vertical bins.
Maykut, G. A., and M. G. McPhee. 1995. Solar heating of the Arctic mixed layer. Journal of Geophysical Research 100, 24691- 24703.
The following acronyms and abbreviations are used in this document.
AIDJEX | Arctic Ice Dynamics Joint Experiment |
ARC | Arctic Sciences Section |
CTD | Conductivity, temperature, and depth |
Fr | Incoming shortwave radiation |
FTP | File Transfer Protocol |
Fw | Oceanic heat flux at the underside of the ice |
NSF | National Science Foundation |
NCAR | National Center for Atmoshperic Research |
OPP | Office of Polar Programs |
psu | Practical salinity units |
SHEBA | Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic |
URL | Uniform Resource Locator |
December 2006
http://data.eol.ucar.edu/codiac/dss/id=106.ARCSS151