Contributions of aerosol‐cloud interactions to mid‐Piacenzian seasonally sea ice‐free Arctic Ocean

Forcings and feedbacks controlling the seasonally sea ice‐free Arctic Ocean during the mid‐Piacenzian Warm period (3.264–3.025 Ma, MPWP), a period when CO2 level, geography, and topography were similar to present day, remain unclear given that many complex Earth System Models with comparatively high...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Other Authors: Feng, Ran (author), Otto‐Bliesner, Bette L. (author), Xu, Yangyang (author), Brady, Esther (author), Fletcher, Tamara (author), Ballantyne, Ashley (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL083960
Description
Summary:Forcings and feedbacks controlling the seasonally sea ice‐free Arctic Ocean during the mid‐Piacenzian Warm period (3.264–3.025 Ma, MPWP), a period when CO2 level, geography, and topography were similar to present day, remain unclear given that many complex Earth System Models with comparatively higher skills at simulating twentieth century Arctic sea ice tend to produce perennial Arctic sea ice for this period. We demonstrate that explicitly simulating aerosol‐cloud interactions and the exclusion of industrial pollutants from model forcing conditions is key to simulating seasonally sea ice‐free Arctic Ocean of MPWP. The absence of industrial pollutants leads to fewer and larger cloud droplets over the high‐latitude Northern Europe and North Pacific, which allows greater absorption of solar radiation at the surface during the early summer. This enhanced absorption triggers the seasonally runaway sea ice surface albedo feedback that gives rise to September sea ice‐free Arctic Ocean and strongly amplified northern high‐latitude surface warmth. 1852977 PLR-1418411