After passing through the Bering
Strait, the Pacific Summer Water is not transported directly to
the Arctic Ocean basin (a sea area with a depth of several thousand meters),
but is heated by sunlight in the Chukchi Sea, which is a shelf area. This
heating, called solar heating, is large, not only in the south where the solar
radiation is strong, but also near the coast of mainland Alaska, which is the
main northward route of the Pacific Summer Water. This is likely because the albedo
became small as a result of the decline in sea ice in the Chukchi Sea, making
it easier for heat to enter the ocean.
Albedo is the ratio of reflected light to incident light. When
the ocean is covered with ice, much of the sunlight is reflected, and the
albedo is close to 1. When the ocean is not covered with ice, most of the
sunlight is absorbed by the ocean, making the value of albedo 0.1 or lower.