Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling

The drivers of rapid Arctic climate change—record sea ice loss, warming SSTs, and a lengthening of the sea ice melt season—compel us to understand how this complex system operates and use this knowledge to enhance Arctic predictability. Changing energy flows sparked by sea ice decline, spotlight atm...

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Published in:Frontiers in Earth Science
Main Authors: Boisvert, Linette N., Boeke, Robyn C., Taylor, Patrick C., Parker, Chelsea L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Frontiers Media SA 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.765304
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2022.765304/full
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spelling crfrontiers:10.3389/feart.2022.765304 2024-09-09T19:19:14+00:00 Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling Boisvert, Linette N. Boeke, Robyn C. Taylor, Patrick C. Parker, Chelsea L. 2022 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.765304 https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2022.765304/full unknown Frontiers Media SA https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Frontiers in Earth Science volume 10 ISSN 2296-6463 journal-article 2022 crfrontiers https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.765304 2024-07-16T04:04:18Z The drivers of rapid Arctic climate change—record sea ice loss, warming SSTs, and a lengthening of the sea ice melt season—compel us to understand how this complex system operates and use this knowledge to enhance Arctic predictability. Changing energy flows sparked by sea ice decline, spotlight atmosphere-surface coupling processes as central to Arctic system function and its climate change response. Despite this, the representation of surface turbulent flux parameterizations in models has not kept pace with our understanding. The large uncertainty in Arctic climate change projections, the central role of atmosphere-surface coupling, and the large discrepancy in model representation of surface turbulent fluxes indicates that these processes may serve as useful observational constraints on projected Arctic climate change. This possibility requires an evaluation of surface turbulent fluxes and their sensitivity to controlling factors (surface-air temperature and moisture differences, sea ice, and winds) within contemporary climate models (here Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6). The influence of individual controlling factors and their interactions is diagnosed using a multi-linear regression approach. This evaluation is done for four sea ice loss regimes, determined from observational sea ice loss trends, to control for the confounding effects of natural variability between models and observations. The comparisons between satellite- and model-derived surface turbulent fluxes illustrate that while models capture the general sensitivity of surface turbulent fluxes to declining sea ice and to surface-air gradients of temperature and moisture, substantial mean state biases exist. Specifically, the central Arctic is too weak of a heat sink to the winter atmosphere compared to observations, with implications to the simulated atmospheric circulation variability and thermodynamic profiles. Models were found to be about 50% more efficient at turning an air-sea temperature gradient anomaly into a sensible heat flux ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Sea ice Frontiers (Publisher) Arctic Frontiers in Earth Science 10
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers (Publisher)
op_collection_id crfrontiers
language unknown
description The drivers of rapid Arctic climate change—record sea ice loss, warming SSTs, and a lengthening of the sea ice melt season—compel us to understand how this complex system operates and use this knowledge to enhance Arctic predictability. Changing energy flows sparked by sea ice decline, spotlight atmosphere-surface coupling processes as central to Arctic system function and its climate change response. Despite this, the representation of surface turbulent flux parameterizations in models has not kept pace with our understanding. The large uncertainty in Arctic climate change projections, the central role of atmosphere-surface coupling, and the large discrepancy in model representation of surface turbulent fluxes indicates that these processes may serve as useful observational constraints on projected Arctic climate change. This possibility requires an evaluation of surface turbulent fluxes and their sensitivity to controlling factors (surface-air temperature and moisture differences, sea ice, and winds) within contemporary climate models (here Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6). The influence of individual controlling factors and their interactions is diagnosed using a multi-linear regression approach. This evaluation is done for four sea ice loss regimes, determined from observational sea ice loss trends, to control for the confounding effects of natural variability between models and observations. The comparisons between satellite- and model-derived surface turbulent fluxes illustrate that while models capture the general sensitivity of surface turbulent fluxes to declining sea ice and to surface-air gradients of temperature and moisture, substantial mean state biases exist. Specifically, the central Arctic is too weak of a heat sink to the winter atmosphere compared to observations, with implications to the simulated atmospheric circulation variability and thermodynamic profiles. Models were found to be about 50% more efficient at turning an air-sea temperature gradient anomaly into a sensible heat flux ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Boisvert, Linette N.
Boeke, Robyn C.
Taylor, Patrick C.
Parker, Chelsea L.
spellingShingle Boisvert, Linette N.
Boeke, Robyn C.
Taylor, Patrick C.
Parker, Chelsea L.
Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling
author_facet Boisvert, Linette N.
Boeke, Robyn C.
Taylor, Patrick C.
Parker, Chelsea L.
author_sort Boisvert, Linette N.
title Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling
title_short Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling
title_full Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling
title_fullStr Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling
title_full_unstemmed Constraining Arctic Climate Projections of Wintertime Warming With Surface Turbulent Flux Observations and Representation of Surface-Atmosphere Coupling
title_sort constraining arctic climate projections of wintertime warming with surface turbulent flux observations and representation of surface-atmosphere coupling
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2022
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.765304
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2022.765304/full
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Sea ice
op_source Frontiers in Earth Science
volume 10
ISSN 2296-6463
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.765304
container_title Frontiers in Earth Science
container_volume 10
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