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Mike Steele

Senior Principal Oceanographer

Email

mas@apl.washington.edu

Phone

206-543-6586

Biosketch

Dr. Steele is interested in the large-scale circulation of sea ice and water in the Arctic Ocean. He uses observations collected by in situ sensors and by satellites, as well as numerical model simulations to investigate time and space variations in sea ice and ocean properties. His analysis of ocean observations has focused on the upper layers, which are generally quite cold and fresh.
Dr. Steele has active field programs in which data are collected in the field by his team and others, using aircraft, ships, and autonomous sensors like buoys and profiling floats. He is also involved with efforts to improve computer models of the arctic marine system, via the Consortium for the Advancement of Marine Arctic Science, or CAMAS.
Funding for his research comes from the National Science Foundation, NASA, the Office of Naval Research, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA), and private foundations. He is involved with many “outreach” programs such as lectures to K-12 and college students. Dr. Steele has been with the Polar Science Center since 1987.

Department Affiliation

Polar Science Center

Education

B.A. Physics, Reed College, 1981

Ph.D. Geophysical Fluid Dynamics, Princeton University, 1987

Projects

North Pole Environmental Observatory

The observatory is staffed by an international research team that establishes a camp at the North Pole each spring to take the pulse of the Arctic Ocean and learn how the world's northernmost sea helps regulate global climate.

 

Producing an Updated Synthesis of the Arctic's Marine Primary Production Regime and its Controls

The focus of this project is to synthesize existing studies and data relating to Arctic Ocean primary production and its changing physical controls such as light, nutrients, and stratification, and to use this synthesis to better understand how primary production varies in time and space and as a function of climate change.

 

A Modular Approach to Building an Arctic Observing System for the IPY and Beyond in the Switchyard Region of the Arctic Ocean

This project will provided for the design, development, and implementation of a component of an Arctic Ocean Observing System in the Switchyard region of the Arctic Ocean (north of Greenland and Nares Strait) that will serve the scientific studies developed for the IPY (International Polar Year), SEARCH (Study of Environmental ARctic Change), and related programs. Specifically, the project will continue and expand two aircraft-based sections between Alert and the North Pole for long-term observation of hydrographic properties and a set of tracers aimed at resolving relative age structure and freshwater components in the upper water column.

 

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Videos

Polar Science Weekend @ Pacific Science Center

This annual event at the Pacific Science Center shares polar science with thousands of visitors. APL-UW researchers inspire appreciation and interest in polar science through dozens of live demonstrations and hands-on activities.

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10 Mar 2017

Polar research and technology were presented to thousands of visitors by APL-UW staff during the Polar Science Weekend at Seattle's Pacific Science Center. The goal of is to inspire an appreciation and interest in science through one-on-one, face-to-face interactions between visitors and scientists. Guided by their 'polar passports', over 10,000 visitors learned about the Greenland ice sheet, the diving behavior of narwhals, the difference between sea ice and freshwater ice, how Seagliders work, and much more as they visited dozens of live demonstrations and activities.

The Polar Science Weekend has grown from an annual outreach event to an educational research project funded by NASA, and has become a model for similar activities hosted by the Pacific Science Center. A new program trains scientists and volunteers how to interact with the public and how to design engaging exhibits.

Arctic Sea Ice Extent and Volume Dip to New Lows

By mid-September, the sea ice extent in the Arctic reached the lowest level recorded since 1979 when satellite mapping began.

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15 Oct 2012

APL-UW polar oceanographers and climatologists are probing the complex ice–ocean–atmosphere system through in situ and remote sensing observations and numerical model simulations to learn how and why.

Changing Freshwater Pathways in the Arctic Ocean

Freshening in the Canada Basin of the Arctic Ocean began in the 1990s. Polar scientist Jamie Morison and colleagues report new insights on the freshening based in part on Arctic-wide views from two satellite system.

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5 Jan 2012

The Arctic Ocean is a repository for a tremendous amount of river runoff, especially from several huge Russian rivers. During the spring of 2008, APL-UW oceanographers on a hydrographic survey in the Arctic detected major shifts in the amount and distribution of fresh water. The Canada basin had freshened, but had the entire Arctic Ocean?

Analysis of satellite records shows that salinity increased on the Russian side of the Arctic and decreased in the Beaufort Sea on the Canadian side. With an Arctic-wide view of circulation from satellite sensors, researchers were able to determine that atmospheric forcing had shifted the transpolar drift counterclockwise and driven Russian runoff east to the Canada Basin.

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Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Ecobuoys for scalable oceanography

Nawaz, A., M. Steele, R. Branch, D. Burnett, K. Liao, M. Parker, and E. Roumeli, "Ecobuoys for scalable oceanography," Mar. Technol. Soc. J., 59, 36-50, doi:10.4031/MTSJ.59.1.8, 2025.

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1 Dec 2025

An approach to scalable surface-drifting buoys is needed to enable the high spatial and temporal resolution of oceanographic data that the science and meteorological communities are asking for. With the number of active buoys predicted to increase by a factor of 100 or more, the impact on the environment becomes even more important. Here, we present a pathway to a scalable and sustainable generation of buoys. We identify the main criteria to be used when developing such buoys to be low cost, with reliable data and neutral or even positive environmental impact. For each buoy subsystem — hull, electronics, energy generation and storage, sensors, and communication system — cutting-edge technological solutions are presented, many of them from emerging research in marine or other disciplines. We then assess the potential solutions against the design criteria and plot a path toward small, environmentally friendly, low-cost, and low-power buoys.

Comparison between SMOS and SMAP sea surface salinity and SASSIE in-situ measurements in the Arctic Ocean

Houndegnonto, O.J., S. Fournier, I.G. Fenty, M. Steele, and A. Pacini, "Comparison between SMOS and SMAP sea surface salinity and SASSIE in-situ measurements in the Arctic Ocean," J. Atmos. Ocean. Technol., EOR, doi:10.1175/JTECH-D-24-0053.1, 2025.

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12 Jun 2025

Sea Surface Salinity (SSS) anomalies and near-surface thermohaline stratification are key parameters to improve our understanding of sea-ice retreat and formation in polar regions. Since 2010, the remote sensing salinity missions ESA SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) and NASA SMAP (Soil Moisture Active Passive) offer unprecedented SSS observations globally (SSSSMOS and SSSSMAP respectively). In this study, we compare these observations with in-situ salinity observations (SSSin-situ) made during the NASA Salinity Field Campaign SASSIE (Salinity and Stratification at Sea-Ice Edge) during the fall of 2022. The SASSIE SSSin-situ were collected by 9 different platforms: CastAway and Underway CTD, Wave Gliders, Thermosalinograph, Snake-salinity, SWIFT drifters, UpTempO buoys, Jet-SSP and ALTO and ALAMO profilers. Because satellite SSS retrievals are impacted by land and sea-ice contaminations, cold temperatures, and surface roughness, mean differences, RMSD and STD between satellite SSS and SSSin-situ are examined as a function of distance from the coast and sea-ice edge, sea surface temperature (SST) and wind speed. We find that SSSSMOS and SSSSMAP are well correlated (0.66 and 0.78 respectively) with similar RMSD when compared with SSSin-situ. Close to the coast (0–150 km), SSSSMAP compare better with SSSin-situ with RMSD (<2 g/kg) lower than that from SSSSMOS. Near the sea-ice edge (0–150 km), SSSSMOS compare better with SSSin-situ with RMSD (<2.5 g/kg) lower than that from SSSSMAP. In cold water (SST<1.5°C) and low wind speed conditions (< 7 m/s), both SSSSMOS and SSSSMAP are consistent with each other. The RMSD between SSSSMAP and SSSin-situ decreases considerably (<1 g/kg) when SST >1.5°C, while the RMSD between SSSSMOS and SSSin-situ shows less dependence on SST.

Weaker seasonal variation in potential energy anomaly in the upper Beaufort Gyre favors the upward release of subsurface heat

Zhong, W., M. Steele, J. Zhang, J. Su, and J. Zhao, "Weaker seasonal variation in potential energy anomaly in the upper Beaufort Gyre favors the upward release of subsurface heat," J. Phys. Oceanogr., EOR, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-24-0205.1, 2025.

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6 Jun 2025

The stability of the upper ocean is crucial for the exchange of momentum, heat, and salt between sea ice and subsurface warm water in the Arctic Ocean’s Beaufort Gyre (BG) region. Here, based on multiple in-situ observations, the shifting phases of the BG during 2003–2023 are objectively defined. We find that the potential energy anomaly (PEA) in the upper 55 m decreased from 130.9 ± 2.3 J/m3 during 2006–2012 with BG intensification to 90.3 ± 2.0 J/m3 during 2013–2019 with BG relaxation. Further, the mixed layer became saltier and deeper across all seasons. Decreasing PEA indicates an overall weaker stratification in the upper water column which promotes stronger vertical entrainment. We also find that the mixed layer heat content increased across nearly all seasons, except during July to September (summer). Our analysis using a Price–Weller–Pinkel model suggests that the cause of this warming was not atmospheric heat fluxes from above, but rather subsurface heat entrainment upward. The key mechanism is the seasonal amplitude of PEA is smaller during 2013–2019 when the BG relaxes, thereby allowing mixing to greater depths under the same surface salt flux as in 2006–2012. This is important for the future evolution of the sea ice melting and oceanic vertical mixing if the BG relaxes further.

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In The News

NOAA researchers study sea ice retreat, link to harmful algal blooms

The Nome Nuggest, Colin A. Warren

Last week a team of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration researchers arrived in Nome to launch the third year of an investigation that seeks to study sea ice retreat and chart phytoplankton in the northern Bering Sea.

14 Jun 2024

Hyperspectral cameras and high-tech buoys: Inside NOAA's Arctic AIR mission

KNOM Radio, Nome, AK, Ben Townsend

A project called 'Arctic AIR' is back in the Bering and Chukchi seas this summer to conduct studies of sea ice retreat and phytoplankton. The researchers seek to better understand rapid changes occurring in the Arctic's marine ecosystem due to climate change.

7 Jun 2024

Arctic's 'last ice area' may be less resistant to global warming

The New York Times, Henry Fountain

The region, which could provide a last refuge for polar bears and other Arctic wildlife that depends on ice, is not as stable as previously thought, according to a new study.

1 Jul 2021

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