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Leah Johnson

Principal Oceanographer

Email

leahjohn@uw.edu

Phone

206-221-2616

Department Affiliation

Ocean Physics

Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Modulation of diurnal SST and diurnal warm layer variability by salinity-driven stratification in the Bay of Bengal

Kerhalkar, S., and 8 others including L. Johnson, "Modulation of diurnal SST and diurnal warm layer variability by salinity-driven stratification in the Bay of Bengal," J. Phys. Oceanogr., 56, 245-266, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-25-0134.1, 2026.

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1 Jan 2026

Diurnal cycles of sea surface temperature (SST) are important for ocean–atmosphere coupling. However, observations of their lateral variability, especially in freshwater-dominated regions and in presence of diurnal warm layers (DWLs), remain limited. This study investigates the spatial differences in the diurnal SST amplitude (during DWL and non-DWL days) and subsurface DWL evolution in the Bay of Bengal using remote sensing, in situ observations, and 1D modeling. While satellite data reveal O(1)°C differences in diurnal SST amplitude over 100 km, in situ observations uncover finer-scale and more extreme variability, especially during DWL events. We observe that differences in diurnal SST amplitude over mesoscale and smaller lengths (<100 km) are larger during DWL days (median: 0.2°C, extreme: 1.4°C) when compared to non-DWL days (median: 0.1°C, extreme: 0.2°C). Observations from drifters and complementary 1D model simulations reveal that lateral differences in salinity-driven stratification leads to diurnal SST amplitude differences of about 0.2°C for shallow mixed layer scenarios (<8 m). While stratification differences explain the median variability in diurnal SST amplitude, extreme differences in diurnal SST require additional contributions from spatial variations in surface forcing and optical properties. Observations also reveal that lateral differences in salinity stratification modify the DWL response, leading to O(10) m differences in DWL depth, making it the same order as typical mixed layer depth (MLD) scales in the Bay. These results highlight the critical role of small-scale differences in salinity-driven stratification (set by rainfall and mesoscale flow fields in the Bay) in causing diurnal SST and DWL response differences.

A collaborative effort toward understanding the air–sea transition zone during the Indian summer monsoon

Johnson, L., A. Tandon, C. Lee, T.S. Kumar, M. Mohapatra, S.A. Rao, S. Chen, H.J.S. Fernando, and J. Goes, "A collaborative effort toward understanding the air–sea transition zone during the Indian summer monsoon," Bull. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., 106, E2509-E2518, doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-24-0239.1, 2025.

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1 Dec 2025

The Indian summer monsoon (ISM) transition is characterized by the seasonal reversal of winds from northeasterly in winter to southwesterly in summer over the north Indian Ocean. Physical processes that govern ISM dynamics are complex, with major characteristics being strong monsoon winds that pick up and transport moisture eastward, resulting in rain over the Indian subcontinent. The accumulation of moisture across the northern Indian Ocean depends on processes occurring on a range of scales across the air–sea transition zone, encapsulating the oceanic and atmospheric boundary layers and the air–sea interface. Many small-scale processes across the air–sea transition layer are not resolved by coupled prediction models and are instead represented by parameterizations, introducing uncertainty. The Enhancing Knowledge of the Arabian Sea Marine Environment through Science and Advanced Training (EKAMSAT) program aims to improve the understanding and parameterization of critical, unresolved small-scale processes that will improve monsoon prediction. This is accomplished through a team-based approach led by Indian and U.S. institutions from the research and operational communities that combines in situ process and large-scale remote observations, multiscale modeling, cross-scale synthesis, innovative training, and capacity building. This is being achieved through intensive multiplatform observational programs across the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal alongside a hierarchy of numerical simulations spanning process, regional, and global circulation models. With a focus on the northern Indian Ocean, the program aims to identify processes governing momentum, heat, and freshwater exchange across the air–sea interface during the ISM transition.

Assessing marine snow dynamics during the demise of the North Atlantic spring bloom using in situ particle imagery

Siegel, D.A., and 17 others including L. Johnson, "Assessing marine snow dynamics during the demise of the North Atlantic spring bloom using in situ particle imagery," Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 39, doi:10.1029/2025GB008676, 2025.

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1 Nov 2025

The ocean's biological pump, a critical component of the Earth's carbon cycle, transports organic matter from the surface ocean to depth and is dominated by sinking particles, often in the form of marine snow-sized (diameter >= 0.5 mm) aggregates. Controls of sinking particle carbon export are thought to be driven largely using ecological processes that create and transform sinking particles. We diagnose the importance of both biotic and abiotic processes in the dynamics of marine snow and other suspended particles using image-based determination of their size distribution. These observations were made during the demise of the North Atlantic spring bloom in May 2021 as part of the Export Processes in the Ocean from RemoTe Sensing-North Atlantic (EXPORTS-NA) field campaign. We show that intense storm events generated high turbulent mixing rates in the upper ocean that impacted the abundance, size distribution, porosity and sinking of marine snow. Mixed-layer turbulence levels both created and destroyed marine snow and the sequence of entrainment and detrainment of the mixed layer induced by repeated storm forcings enhanced the vertical transport of aggregates to depth. Evidence of biological transformations was also observed at mesopelagic depths, both for the consumption of particulate matter and in the creation of smaller particles from larger ones, likely due to interactions with zooplankton. Collectively, these results illustrate the complex interplay of physical and biological processes regulating the dynamics of marine snow and suggest their inclusion in predictive models of the ocean's biological pump.

More Publications

Acoustics Air-Sea Interaction & Remote Sensing Center for Industrial & Medical Ultrasound Electronic & Photonic Systems Environmental & Information Systems Ocean Engineering Ocean Physics Polar Science Center
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