Litcius/Paper detail

Quantifying the role of ocean coupling in Arctic amplification and sea-ice loss over the 21st century

Rei Chemke, Lorenzo M. Polvani, Jennifer E. Kay, Clara Orbe

2021npj Climate and Atmospheric Science26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The enhanced warming of the Arctic, relative to other parts of the Earth, a phenomenon known as Arctic amplification, is one of the most striking features of climate change, and has important climatic impacts for the entire Northern Hemisphere. Several mechanisms are believed to be responsible for Arctic amplification; however, a quantitative understanding of their relative importance is still missing. Here, using ensembles of model integrations, we quantify the contribution of ocean coupling, both its thermodynamic and dynamic components, to Arctic amplification over the 20th and 21st centuries. We show that ocean coupling accounts for ~80% of the amplification by 2100. In particular, we show that thermodynamic coupling is responsible for future amplification and sea-ice loss as it overcomes the effect of dynamic coupling which reduces the amplification and sea-ice loss by ~35%. Our results demonstrate the utility of targeted numerical experiments to quantify the role of specific mechanisms in Arctic amplification, for better constraining climate projections.

Topics & Concepts

ArcticSea iceClimatologyArctic sea ice declineCoupling (piping)Arctic geoengineeringArctic ice packThe arcticEnvironmental scienceNorthern HemisphereClimate changeClimate modelOceanographyGeologyDrift iceEngineeringMechanical engineeringArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsClimate variability and modelsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
Quantifying the role of ocean coupling in Arctic amplification and sea-ice loss over the 21st century | Litcius