Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products

Sea ice extent variability, a measure based on satellite-derived sea ice concentration measurements, has traditionally been used as an indicator to evaluate the impact of climate change on polar regions. However, concentration-based measurements of ice variability do not allow the discrimination of...

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Published in:The Cryosphere
Main Authors: Jager, Wayne, Vichi, Marcello
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-16-925-2022
https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/16/925/2022/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:tc94652 2023-05-15T14:02:18+02:00 Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products Jager, Wayne Vichi, Marcello 2022-03-14 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-16-925-2022 https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/16/925/2022/ eng eng doi:10.5194/tc-16-925-2022 https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/16/925/2022/ eISSN: 1994-0424 Text 2022 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-16-925-2022 2022-03-21T17:22:17Z Sea ice extent variability, a measure based on satellite-derived sea ice concentration measurements, has traditionally been used as an indicator to evaluate the impact of climate change on polar regions. However, concentration-based measurements of ice variability do not allow the discrimination of the relative contributions made by thermodynamic and dynamic processes, prompting the need to use sea ice drift products and develop methods to quantify changes in sea ice dynamics that would indicate trends in the ice characteristics. Here, we present a new method to automate the detection of rotational drift features in Antarctic sea ice from space at spatial and temporal scales comparable to that of polar weather. This analysis focusses on drift features in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean in the period 2013–2020 using currently available satellite ice motion products from EUMETSAT OSI SAF. We observe a large discrepancy between cyclonic and anticyclonic drift features, with cyclonic features typically exhibiting larger drift intensity and spatial variability according to all products. The mean intensity of the 95th percentile of cyclonic features is 1.5–2.0 times larger for cyclonic features than anticyclonic features. The spatial variability of cyclonic features increased with intensity, indicating that the most intense cyclonic features are also the least homogenous. There is good agreement between products in detecting anticyclonic features; however, larger disagreement is evident for cyclonic features, with the merged product showing the most intense 95th percentile threshold and largest spatial variability, likely due to the more extended coverage of valid vorticity points. A time series analysis of the 95th percentile shows an abrupt intensification of cyclonic features from 2014–2017, which coincides with the record decline in Antarctic sea ice extent since winter of 2015. Our results indicate the need for systematic assessments of sea ice drift products against dedicated observational experiments in the weather-dominated Atlantic sector. Such information will allow us to confirm whether the detected increase in cyclonic vorticity is linked to rapidly changing atmospheric changes driven by sea ice dynamics and establish the measure of rotational sea ice drift as a potential indicator of weather-driven variability in Antarctic sea ice. Text Antarc* Antarctic Sea ice Southern Ocean Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Antarctic Southern Ocean The Cryosphere 16 3 925 940
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description Sea ice extent variability, a measure based on satellite-derived sea ice concentration measurements, has traditionally been used as an indicator to evaluate the impact of climate change on polar regions. However, concentration-based measurements of ice variability do not allow the discrimination of the relative contributions made by thermodynamic and dynamic processes, prompting the need to use sea ice drift products and develop methods to quantify changes in sea ice dynamics that would indicate trends in the ice characteristics. Here, we present a new method to automate the detection of rotational drift features in Antarctic sea ice from space at spatial and temporal scales comparable to that of polar weather. This analysis focusses on drift features in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean in the period 2013–2020 using currently available satellite ice motion products from EUMETSAT OSI SAF. We observe a large discrepancy between cyclonic and anticyclonic drift features, with cyclonic features typically exhibiting larger drift intensity and spatial variability according to all products. The mean intensity of the 95th percentile of cyclonic features is 1.5–2.0 times larger for cyclonic features than anticyclonic features. The spatial variability of cyclonic features increased with intensity, indicating that the most intense cyclonic features are also the least homogenous. There is good agreement between products in detecting anticyclonic features; however, larger disagreement is evident for cyclonic features, with the merged product showing the most intense 95th percentile threshold and largest spatial variability, likely due to the more extended coverage of valid vorticity points. A time series analysis of the 95th percentile shows an abrupt intensification of cyclonic features from 2014–2017, which coincides with the record decline in Antarctic sea ice extent since winter of 2015. Our results indicate the need for systematic assessments of sea ice drift products against dedicated observational experiments in the weather-dominated Atlantic sector. Such information will allow us to confirm whether the detected increase in cyclonic vorticity is linked to rapidly changing atmospheric changes driven by sea ice dynamics and establish the measure of rotational sea ice drift as a potential indicator of weather-driven variability in Antarctic sea ice.
format Text
author Jager, Wayne
Vichi, Marcello
spellingShingle Jager, Wayne
Vichi, Marcello
Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products
author_facet Jager, Wayne
Vichi, Marcello
author_sort Jager, Wayne
title Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products
title_short Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products
title_full Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products
title_fullStr Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products
title_full_unstemmed Rotational drift in Antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products
title_sort rotational drift in antarctic sea ice: pronounced cyclonic features and differences between data products
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-16-925-2022
https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/16/925/2022/
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
op_source eISSN: 1994-0424
op_relation doi:10.5194/tc-16-925-2022
https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/16/925/2022/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-16-925-2022
container_title The Cryosphere
container_volume 16
container_issue 3
container_start_page 925
op_container_end_page 940
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