Diurnal Warming at the Ocean Surface

Diurnal warming (DW) at the ocean surface occurs when there is sufficient solar heating in the absence of vertical mixing. DW has been well described using satellite and in-situ observations, but there are very few reports at northerly latitudes. We focus on such events based on measurements conducted with an upwardly-rising microstructure profiler. We are especially interested in the conditions of DW event formation, their vertical and horizontal extension and their dynamics and evolution.

Furthermore, we investigate whether DW events at northerly latitudes are also detected by satellite observations. First assessments indicate that there are certain conditions under which DW events can form, but detection by remote sensing systems is not possible. As this is the most prevalent detection method, DW events have the potential to occur more frequently than satellites can observe.

Graph: The temperature in the Labrador Sea as a function of depth and time on a day in May. We observed a diurnal warming event, i.e. an increase in water temperature near the surface of the ocean over the course of the day.
© Simon Hauser

PICO presentation at EGU 2025 in Vienna:

Hauser, S., ten Doeschate, A., Ward, B., and Esters, L.: A Significant In-Situ Diurnal Warming Event in the Labrador Sea Unobserved by Satellite Observations, EGU General Assembly 2025, Vienna, Austria, 27 Apr–2 May 2025, EGU25-6921, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-6921, 2025.

Contact

Avatar Esters

Jun.-Prof. Dr. Leonie Esters Junior professorship

Meteorology

1.010

Auf dem Hügel 20

53121 Bonn

Avatar Hauser

Simon Hauser PhD student

Meteorology

1.016

Auf dem Hügel 20

53121 Bonn



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