Published December 12, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Sea ice thickness and recent Arctic warming

  • 1. Danish Meteorological Institute Copenhagen Denmark; Niels Bohr Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark
  • 2. Danish Meteorological Institute Copenhagen Denmark
  • 3. Niels Bohr Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

Description

AbstractThe climatic impact of increased Arctic sea ice loss has received growing attention in the last years. However, little focus has been set on the role of sea ice thickness, although it strongly determines surface heat fluxes. Here ensembles of simulations using the EC‐Earth atmospheric model (Integrated Forecast System) are performed and analyzed to quantify the atmospheric impacts of Arctic sea ice thickness change since 1982 as revealed by the sea ice model assimilation Global Ice‐Ocean Modeling and Assimilation System. Results show that the recent sea ice thinning has significantly affected the Arctic climate, while remote atmospheric responses are less pronounced owing to a high internal atmospheric variability. Locally, the sea ice thinning results in enhancement of near‐surface warming of about 1°C per decade in winter, which is most pronounced over marginal sea ice areas with thin ice. This leads to an increase of the Arctic amplification factor by 37%.

Files

fulltext.pdf

Files (4.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:76674aa10e389cc290a72f41cc461084
4.0 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Funding

European Commission
ICE2ICE - Arctic Sea Ice and Greenland Ice Sheet Sensitivity 610055