Ramon, Cintia L.Ulloa Sánchez, Hugo N.Doda, TomyWinters, Kraig B.Bouffard, Damien2021-04-262021-04-262021-04-262021-04-0710.5194/hess-25-1813-2021https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/177664In late winter, solar radiation is the main driver of water motion in ice-covered lakes. The resulting circulation and mixing determine the spatial distribution of heat within the lake and affect the heat budget of the ice cover. Although under-ice lake warming is often modeled as a onedimensional (1D) vertical process, lake bathymetry induces a relative excess heating of shallow waters, creating horizontal density gradients. This study shows that the dynamic response to these gradients depends sensitively on lake size and latitude – Earth’s rotation – and is controlled by the Rossby number. In the ageostrophic limit, horizontal density gradients drive cross-shore circulation that transports excess heat to the lake interior, accelerating the under-ice warming there. In the geostrophic regime, the circulation of the near- and off-shore waters decouples, and excess heat is retained in the shallows. The flow regime controls the fate of this excess heat and its contribution to water-induced ice melt.Bathymetry and latitude modify lake warming under icetext::journal::journal article::research article