Persistence and Inherent Predictability of Arctic Sea Ice in a GCM Ensemble and Observations

作者: Edward Blanchard-Wrigglesworth , Kyle C. Armour , Cecilia M. Bitz , Eric DeWeaver

DOI: 10.1175/2010JCLI3775.1

关键词:

摘要: The temporal characteristics of Arctic sea ice extent and area are analyzed in terms of their lagged correlation in observations and a GCM ensemble. Observations and model output generally match, exhibiting a red-noise spectrum, where significant correlation (or memory) is lost within 2–5 months. September sea ice extent is significantly correlated with extent of the previous August and July, and thus these months show a predictive skill of the summer minimum extent. Beyond this initial loss of memory, there is an increase in correlation—a reemergence of memory—that is more ubiquitous in the model than observations. There are two distinct modes of memory reemergence in the model. The first, a summer-to-summer reemergence arises within the model from the persistence of thickness anomalies and their influence on ice area. The second, which is also seen in observations, is associated with anomalies in the growth season that originate in the melt season. This reemergence stems from the several-month persistence of SSTs. In the model memory reemergence is enhanced by the sea ice albedo feedback. The same mechanisms that give rise to reemergence also enhance the 1-month lagged correlation during summer and winter. The study finds the least correlation between successive months when the sea ice is most rapidly advancing or retreating.

参考文章(41)
Marika M. Holland, Cecilia M. Bitz, L.-Bruno Tremblay, David A. Bailey, The Role of Natural Versus Forced Change in Future Rapid Summer Arctic Ice Loss Arctic Sea Ice Decline: Observations, Projections, Mechanisms, and Implications. ,vol. 180, pp. 133- 150 ,(2013) , 10.1029/180GM10
Eric T. DeWeaver, Cecilia M. Bitz, L.-Bruno Tremblay, Some Aspects of Uncertainty in Predicting Sea Ice Thinning Arctic Sea Ice Decline: Observations, Projections, Mechanisms, and Implications. ,vol. 180, pp. 63- 76 ,(2013) , 10.1029/180GM06
R. Kwok, D. A. Rothrock, Decline in Arctic sea ice thickness from submarine and ICESat records: 1958–2008 Geophysical Research Letters. ,vol. 36, ,(2009) , 10.1029/2009GL039035
Arctic Monitoring, Assessment Programme, Susan Joy Hassol, Impacts of a warming Arctic : Arctic Climate Impact Assessment Cambridge University Press. ,(2004)
Uma S. Bhatt, Michael A. Alexander, Clara Deser, John E. Walsh, Jack S. Miller, Michael S. Timlin, James Scott, Robert A. Tomas, The Atmospheric Response to Realistic Reduced Summer Arctic Sea Ice Anomalies Arctic Sea Ice Decline: Observations, Projections, Mechanisms, and Implications. ,vol. 180, pp. 91- 110 ,(2013) , 10.1029/180GM08
Gregory M. Flato, Spatial and temporal variability of Arctic ice thickness Annals of Glaciology. ,vol. 21, pp. 323- 329 ,(1995) , 10.1017/S0260305500016013
Ralf Döscher, Klaus Wyser, H. E. Markus Meier, Minwei Qian, René Redler, Quantifying Arctic contributions to climate predictability in a regional coupled ocean-ice-atmosphere model Climate Dynamics. ,vol. 34, pp. 1157- 1176 ,(2010) , 10.1007/S00382-009-0567-Y
Robert R Dickson, Jens Meincke, Svend-Aage Malmberg, Arthur J Lee, The great salinity anomaly in the northern North Atlantic 1968-1982 Progress in Oceanography. ,vol. 20, pp. 103- 151 ,(1988) , 10.1016/0079-6611(88)90049-3