Attribution of sea ice changes to cyclones, fronts, and cold-air outbreaks

Rapid changes in the sea ice cover are commonly attributed to periods of strong winds, which in turn are often associated with cyclones and their fronts. In addition to geographically redistributing sea ice, and thereby potentially increasing its export from the Arctic, cyclones also transport moist...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Spengler, T., Regan, H., Boutin, G., Spensberger, C.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5016642
Description
Summary:Rapid changes in the sea ice cover are commonly attributed to periods of strong winds, which in turn are often associated with cyclones and their fronts. In addition to geographically redistributing sea ice, and thereby potentially increasing its export from the Arctic, cyclones also transport moist warm air masses into the Arctic, which can lead to local sea ice melt while the cyclone’s cold sector might lead to freezing and sea ice formation. Furthermore, cold air outbreaks associated with the withdrawal of cold air masses over the open ocean usually yield sea-ice formation. The relative contribution of these competing effects of weather events on the sea ice is so far poorly understood. We climatologically assess these competing effects of cyclones on sea ice using detected cyclones, fronts, and cold-air outbreaks in the coupled ECMWF CERA-SAT reanalyses as well as in the state-of-the-art sea ice model neXtSIM driven by ERA5. We decompose the climatological sea-ice increase and decrease during different seasons into the components that occur in the vicinity or at larger distance from the different weather events. The amplitude of both positive and negative sea ice changes increases around cyclones, with an overall net effect of reducing sea-ice concentration during all seasons. In contrast, cold-air outbreaks are always associated with sea-ice growth, but exhibit a clear seasonality in their frequency of occurrence. In general, however, only a small fraction of sea-ice concentration changes can be attributed to either cold-air outbreaks or cyclones for all seasons.