I think that when north winds blow out of the CAB in Jan-Feb-Mar it is near impossible for the Barents to remain ice free, regardless of heat content.
But does it need to be
totally ice-free?
Note - all the graphs here are from NSIDC 5-day sea ice
AREA data. I use area, not extent, as we are basically talking about the Arctic seas changing from an icy desert to open water, with all the climate changes that that implies.
As you can see from the first graph, Barents sea ice is melting earlier and earlier and refreezing later and later. Also winter sea ice in the 2010s is about half that of the 1980s. This suggests that more ocean heat is being accumulated during melting than is lost through the greater open water due to the later refreeze.
I started thinking about measuring the loss of sea ice a couple of years ago. My first attempt was to look at the number of days each year sea ice area was less than various percentages of the total area of each sea (or for seas like the Barents bounded by open ocean, the maximum daily extent in the satellite record). I plumped for less than 50%, less than 15%, and less than 5% (which to me is near enough ice-free).
The results for the Barents is in the second graph. The trend in the number of days the Barents is virtually ice-free has increased from around 50 in 1980 to around 125 in 2021. But that tells me little about winter sea ice. However, the trend in the number of days when sea ice is less than 50% has increased from around 150 in 1980 to around 325 in 2021. i.e. for only 40 days in the year can one expect sea ice to be more than half the area of the sea.
My last graph looks at sea ice area for various periods of the year. But instead of looking at trhe sea ice,
I looked at the percentages of open water. The graph shows that at maximum sea ice, this sea is now more open water than sea ice. It also shows well the increase in open water for the period November to January from around 60% in the 1980s to 80% or more in recent years.
When you look next door to its neighbour, the Kara, you see since around 2012 a significant change, especially in volient yearly variation in open water in the period November to January, with a smaller increase in open water in the period of maximum sea ice (Feb to April). Perhaps this has something to do with the Barents being less of a hindrance to change.
click images to enlargeGoodnight all