High-resolution ocean temperature, salinity, current, and turbulence data were collected at an Arctic thermohaline front in the Nansen Basin. The front was close to the sea ice edge and separated the cold and fresh surface melt water from the warm and saline mixed layer. Measurements were made on 18 September 2018, in the upper 100 m, from a research vessel and an autonomous underwater vehicle. Destabilizing surface buoyancy fluxes from a combination of heat loss to the atmosphere and cross-front Ekman transport by down-front winds reduced the potential vorticity in the upper ocean. Turbulence structure in the mixed layer was generally consistent with turbulence production through convection by heat loss to atmosphere and mechanical forcing by moderate winds. Conditions at the front were favorable for forced symmetric instability, a mechanism drawing energy from the frontal geostrophic current. A clear signature of increased dissipation from symmetric instability could not be identified; however, this instability could potentially account for the increased dissipation rates at the front location down to 40 m depth that could not be explained by the atmospheric forcing. This turbulence was associated with turbulent heat fluxes of up to 10 W m −2 , eroding the warm and cold intrusions observed between 30 and 60 m depth. A Seaglider sampled across a similar frontal structure in the same region 10 days after our survey. The submesoscale-to-turbulence-scale transitions and resulting mixing can be widespread and important in the Atlantic sector of the Arctic Ocean.
Plain Language SummaryOn 18 September 2018, high-resolution temperature, salinity, current, and turbulence data were collected near a surface temperature and salinity front in the Nansen Basin north of Svalbard, within the framework of the Nansen Legacy Project. Measurements were performed from the research icebreaker Kronprins Haakon and using an autonomous underwater vehicle. The front separates warm and salty Atlantic-origin waters from cold and fresh Arctic-origin waters. Energetic turbulence in the upper 30 m was consistent with convection by heat loss to the atmosphere and mechanical forcing by moderate winds at the surface of the ocean. At the front, the conditions were favorable for forced symmetric instability, a mechanism drawing energy from the large-scale current. The contribution to turbulence from this instability could not be clearly identified but can be potentially important. Such observations linking 1-3 km scales to turbulence in the Arctic Ocean are rare. Turbulence at a front in the Arctic has consequences on the heat and nutrient transport from the slope to the deep Arctic Basin. A Seaglider sampled across a similar frontal structure in the same region end of September 2018. Observed frontal structure and mixing processes can be common in the Atlantic sector of the Arctic Ocean.