Litcius/Paper detail

Arctic Ocean Amplification in a warming climate in CMIP6 models

Qi Shu, Qiang Wang, Marius Årthun, Shizhu Wang, Zhenya Song, Min Zhang, Fangli Qiao

2022Science Advances176 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Arctic near-surface air temperature warms much faster than the global average, a phenomenon known as Arctic Amplification. The change of the underlying Arctic Ocean could influence climate through its interaction with sea ice, atmosphere, and the global ocean, but it is less well understood. Here, we show that the upper 2000 m of the Arctic Ocean warms at 2.3 times the global mean rate within this depth range averaged over the 21st century in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 Shared Socioeconomic Pathway 585 scenario. We call this phenomenon the "Arctic Ocean Amplification." The amplified Arctic Ocean warming can be attributed to a substantial increase in poleward ocean heat transport, which will continue outweighing sea surface heat loss in the future. Arctic Amplification of both the atmosphere and ocean indicates that the Arctic as a whole is one of Earth's regions most susceptible to climate change.

Topics & Concepts

ArcticArctic geoengineeringArctic sea ice declineEnvironmental scienceCoupled model intercomparison projectClimatologyThe arcticAtmosphere (unit)Climate changeGlobal warmingSea iceArctic dipole anomalyClimate modelEffects of global warming on oceansSea surface temperatureOcean heat contentOceanographyArctic ice packAtmospheric sciencesGeologyMeteorologyGeographyDrift iceArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsClimate variability and modelsClimate change and permafrost