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Southern Ocean Sea-Ice Response to Atmospheric Warming (Abstract)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Claire L. Parkinson
Affiliation:
Goddard Laboratory for Atmospheric Sciences, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt Maryland 20771, U.S.A.
Robert A. Bindschadler
Affiliation:
Goddard Laboratory for Atmospheric Sciences, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt Maryland 20771, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1984

The response of Antarctic sea ice to hypothetical atmospheric temperature increases has been simulated with a thermodynamic/dynamic sea-ice model having horizontal resolution of approximately 200 km. The model was run, as a standard case, with mean-monthly climatological air temperatures and dew points, followed by four subsequent simulations with all temperatures and dew points uniformly increased by -1, +1, +3, and +5 K. A temperature increase of 3 K suffices to eliminate the mid-summer ice around all of East Antarctica, with ice remaining only in the Amundsen and western Weddell seas. A temperature increase of 5 K suffices to eliminate the summer ice cover almost entirely, a small amount of ice remaining only off the Thwaites Glacier region in the Amundsen Sea. In winter, the hemispheric average of the calculated ice-edge retreat rates is 1.4° latitude for each 1 K increase in atmospheric temperature. These retreat rates are nonlinear with respect to temperature change, the sensitivity of the position of the ice edge decreasing as temperatures are further increased. This nonlinearity in the response of the ice edge occurs in the response of other ice variables as well, including the total ice area and total ice volume at maximum ice extent. These maximum areas and volumes decrease by roughly half with an atmospheric temperature increase of 5 K. Among the other simulation results of increasing the atmospheric temperatures is an increase in the temporal asymmetry in the annual cycle of ice cover, showing longer, slower periods of ice growth and shorter, faster periods of ice decay.

The results of this study are described in full in a paper to appear in: Hansen J, Takahashi T (eds) Climate processes: sensitivity to solar irradiance and CO2. Washington, DC, American Geophysical Union (M Ewing Series 4).