Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre

This thesis investigates the influence of arctic sea ice on the winter climate in the 20th century in a high resolution general circulation model (ECHAM5.3, T213). For all seasons in the perturbed simulation sea ice cover (SIC) is replaced by open water at the freezing point, which is then compared...

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Main Author: Harlaß, Jan
Format: Thesis
Language:German
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/1/Harlass_2011_Diplomarbeit.pdf
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author Harlaß, Jan
author_facet Harlaß, Jan
author_sort Harlaß, Jan
collection OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel)
description This thesis investigates the influence of arctic sea ice on the winter climate in the 20th century in a high resolution general circulation model (ECHAM5.3, T213). For all seasons in the perturbed simulation sea ice cover (SIC) is replaced by open water at the freezing point, which is then compared with the control run. The effect of completely reduced SIC is then assessed and compared to the effect of an anthropogenic global temperature rise in the projected future summer climate at the end of 21th century (A1B-Szenario scenario), when SIC is reduced to 12% to 20% (August to October)of the SIC in the 20th century. It is shown, that the melting of all sea ice has impacts on the climate in the winter season (January to March) reaching as far south as the subtropics and leads to responses in the dynamic of the atmosphere. The atmospheric warming, caused by an increase of sensible and latent upward heat fluxes from the Arctic Ocean, is conned to the lower troposphere and the high latitudes, whereas temperatures decrease significantly over Siberia. Other than an expected decrease in sea level pressure (SLP), due to the large-scale warming, SLP reduces only in the western Arctic, northeast North America and the North Atlantic, while it increases over northern Asia and Europe as well as over Greenland, which means an intensication and expansion of the Siberian High into the North Atlantic. Due to a smaller meridional temperature gradient, the large-scale atmospheric circulation weakens and moves a little southward, so that the subtropical jet is focused over 30°N. The 10m wind speed decreases in large areas outside the Arctic. Furthermore, the variability of SLP and 2m temperature decrease in the polar region. The leading modes of SLP variability (EOF analysis) are shifted to lower amounts of explained variance, whereby the Arctic Oscillation pattern remains as the dominant mode. Contrary to the 20th century, the planetary circulation in the summer climate of the 21th century strengthens and moves to the North. Zonal ...
format Thesis
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Arktis*
Greenland
North Atlantic
Sea ice
Siberia
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Arktis*
Greenland
North Atlantic
Sea ice
Siberia
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Greenland
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Greenland
id ftoceanrep:oai:oceanrep.geomar.de:12306
institution Open Polar
language German
op_collection_id ftoceanrep
op_relation https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/1/Harlass_2011_Diplomarbeit.pdf
Harlaß, J. (2011) Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre. (Diploma thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität, Kiel, Germany, 101 pp.
op_rights UrhG
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
publishDate 2011
record_format openpolar
spelling ftoceanrep:oai:oceanrep.geomar.de:12306 2025-01-16T20:21:08+00:00 Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre Harlaß, Jan 2011 text https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/ https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/1/Harlass_2011_Diplomarbeit.pdf de ger https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/1/Harlass_2011_Diplomarbeit.pdf Harlaß, J. (2011) Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre. (Diploma thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität, Kiel, Germany, 101 pp. UrhG info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2011 ftoceanrep 2024-08-13T14:03:58Z This thesis investigates the influence of arctic sea ice on the winter climate in the 20th century in a high resolution general circulation model (ECHAM5.3, T213). For all seasons in the perturbed simulation sea ice cover (SIC) is replaced by open water at the freezing point, which is then compared with the control run. The effect of completely reduced SIC is then assessed and compared to the effect of an anthropogenic global temperature rise in the projected future summer climate at the end of 21th century (A1B-Szenario scenario), when SIC is reduced to 12% to 20% (August to October)of the SIC in the 20th century. It is shown, that the melting of all sea ice has impacts on the climate in the winter season (January to March) reaching as far south as the subtropics and leads to responses in the dynamic of the atmosphere. The atmospheric warming, caused by an increase of sensible and latent upward heat fluxes from the Arctic Ocean, is conned to the lower troposphere and the high latitudes, whereas temperatures decrease significantly over Siberia. Other than an expected decrease in sea level pressure (SLP), due to the large-scale warming, SLP reduces only in the western Arctic, northeast North America and the North Atlantic, while it increases over northern Asia and Europe as well as over Greenland, which means an intensication and expansion of the Siberian High into the North Atlantic. Due to a smaller meridional temperature gradient, the large-scale atmospheric circulation weakens and moves a little southward, so that the subtropical jet is focused over 30°N. The 10m wind speed decreases in large areas outside the Arctic. Furthermore, the variability of SLP and 2m temperature decrease in the polar region. The leading modes of SLP variability (EOF analysis) are shifted to lower amounts of explained variance, whereby the Arctic Oscillation pattern remains as the dominant mode. Contrary to the 20th century, the planetary circulation in the summer climate of the 21th century strengthens and moves to the North. Zonal ... Thesis Arctic Arctic Ocean Arktis* Greenland North Atlantic Sea ice Siberia OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel) Arctic Arctic Ocean Greenland
spellingShingle Harlaß, Jan
Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre
title Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre
title_full Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre
title_fullStr Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre
title_full_unstemmed Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre
title_short Einfluss des arktischen Meereises auf das Klima der Nordhemisphäre
title_sort einfluss des arktischen meereises auf das klima der nordhemisphäre
url https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/12306/1/Harlass_2011_Diplomarbeit.pdf