• Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change 

      Turner, Charles E.; Brown, Peter J.; Oliver, Kevin I. C.; McDonagh, Elaine Louise (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)
      As the planet warms due to the accumulation of anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere, the interaction of surface ocean carbonate chemistry and the radiative forcing of atmospheric CO2 leads to the global ocean sequestering ...
    • The Iceland-Faroe warm-water flow towards the Arctic estimated from satellite altimetry and in situ observations 

      Hansen, Bogi; Larsen, Karin Margretha Húsgarð; Hátún, Egil Hjálmar; Olsen, Steffen M.; Gierisch, Andrea M. U.; Østerhus, Svein; Ólafsdóttir, Sædis (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)
      The inflow of warm and saline Atlantic water to the Arctic Mediterranean (Nordic Seas and Arctic Ocean) between Iceland and the Faroes (IF inflow) is the strongest Atlantic inflow branch in terms of volume transport and ...
    • Norwegian Sea net community production estimated from O2 and prototype CO2 optode measurements on a Seaglider 

      Possenti, Luca; Skjelvan, Ingunn; Atamanchuk, Dariia; Tengberg, Anders; Humphreys, Matthew P.; Loucaides, Socratis; Fernand, Liam; Kaiser, Jan (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      We report on a pilot study using a CO2 optode deployed on a Seaglider in the Norwegian Sea from March to October 2014. The optode measurements required drift and lag correction and in situ calibration using discrete water ...
    • Surface atmospheric forcing as the driver of long-term pathways and timescales of ocean ventilation 

      Marzocchi, Alice; Nurser, A.J. George; Clément, Louis; McDonagh, Elaine Louise (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      The ocean takes up 93 % of the excess heat in the climate system and approximately a quarter of the anthropogenic carbon via air–sea fluxes. Ocean ventilation and subduction are key processes that regulate the transport ...
    • The transient sensitivity of sea level rise 

      Grinsted, Aslak; Christensen, Jens Hesselbjerg (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021)
      Recent assessments from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) imply that global mean sea level is unlikely to rise more than about 1.1 m within this century but will increase further beyond 2100. Even within ...