Antarctic summer sea ice trend in the context of high-latitude atmospheric circulation changes

The potential mechanisms underlying the observed increasing trend in Antarctic summertime sea ice cover for the 1979-2017 period have been investigated using a relatively novel method called the self-organizing map (SOM). Among the nine nodes generated to explain the variability of Antarctic sea ice...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Climate
Other Authors: Yu, Lejiang (author), Zhong, Shiyuan (author), Zhou, Mingyu (author), Sun, Bo (author), Lenschow, Donald H. (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0739.1
Description
Summary:The potential mechanisms underlying the observed increasing trend in Antarctic summertime sea ice cover for the 1979-2017 period have been investigated using a relatively novel method called the self-organizing map (SOM). Among the nine nodes generated to explain the variability of Antarctic sea ice cover, two (nodes 3 and 7) exhibit a statistically significant linear trend in the time series of the frequency of the SOM pattern occurrence that together explain 40% of the total trend in the sea ice cover. These two nodes have completely opposite spatial patterns and directions of trend and are associated with different atmospheric circulation patterns. Node 3, which represents an increase in sea ice over the Weddell Sea and the eastern Ross Sea and a decrease over the other coastal seas of West Antarctica, appears to be related to the positive phase of the southern annular mode (SAM) linked with the La Nina pattern of sea surface temperature (SST) over the tropical Pacific Ocean. The opposite spatial pattern and trend represented by node 7 is associated with a wave train originating over northern Australia. The anomalous wind field, surface downward longwave radiation, and surface air temperature generated by these circulation patterns are consistent with the spatial pattern and overall trends in the Antarctic sea ice cover.