10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition

This study investigates the effect of deglacial climate on the deposition of the solar proxy 10Be globally, and at two specific locations, the GRIP site at Summit, Central Greenland, and the Law Dome site in coastal Antarctica. The deglacial climate is represented by three 30 year time slice simulat...

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Main Authors: Heikkila, U, Shi, Xue, Phipps, Steven J, Smith, A M
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Research Online 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1812
https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2830&context=smhpapers
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spelling ftunivwollongong:oai:ro.uow.edu.au:smhpapers-2830 2023-05-15T13:53:47+02:00 10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition Heikkila, U Shi, Xue Phipps, Steven J Smith, A M 2014-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1812 https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2830&context=smhpapers unknown Research Online https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1812 https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2830&context=smhpapers Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health - Papers: part A Medicine and Health Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences article 2014 ftunivwollongong 2020-02-25T10:58:35Z This study investigates the effect of deglacial climate on the deposition of the solar proxy 10Be globally, and at two specific locations, the GRIP site at Summit, Central Greenland, and the Law Dome site in coastal Antarctica. The deglacial climate is represented by three 30 year time slice simulations of 10 000 BP (years before present = 1950 CE), 11 000 and 12 000 BP, compared with a preindustrial control simulation. The model used is the ECHAM5-HAM atmospheric aerosol-climate model, driven with sea-surface temperatures and sea ice cover simulated using the CSIRO Mk3L coupled climate system model. The focus is on isolating the 10Be production signal, driven by solar variability, from the weather- or climate-driven noise in the 10Be deposition flux during different stages of climate. The production signal varies at lower frequencies, dominated by the 11 year solar cycle within the 30 year timescale of these experiments. The climatic noise is of higher frequencies than 11 years during the 30 year period studied. We first apply empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis to global 10Be deposition on the annual scale and find that the first principal component, consisting of the spatial pattern of mean 10Be deposition and the temporally varying solar signal, explains 64% of the variability. The following principal components are closely related to those of precipitation. Then, we apply ensemble empirical decomposition (EEMD) analysis to the time series of 10Be deposition at GRIP and at Law Dome, which is an effective method for adaptively decomposing the time series into different frequency components. The low-frequency components and the long-term trend represent production and have reduced noise compared to the entire frequency spectrum of the deposition. The high-frequency components represent climate-driven noise related to the seasonal cycle of e.g. precipitation and are closely connected to high frequencies of precipitation. These results firstly show that the 10Be atmospheric production signal is preserved in the deposition flux to surface even during climates very different from today's both in global data and at two specific locations. Secondly, noise can be effectively reduced from 10Be deposition data by simply applying the EOF analysis in the case of a reasonably large number of available data sets, or by decomposing the individual data sets to filter out high-frequency fluctuations. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Greenland GRIP Sea ice University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online Greenland Law Dome ENVELOPE(112.833,112.833,-66.733,-66.733)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online
op_collection_id ftunivwollongong
language unknown
topic Medicine and Health Sciences
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine and Health Sciences
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Heikkila, U
Shi, Xue
Phipps, Steven J
Smith, A M
10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition
topic_facet Medicine and Health Sciences
Social and Behavioral Sciences
description This study investigates the effect of deglacial climate on the deposition of the solar proxy 10Be globally, and at two specific locations, the GRIP site at Summit, Central Greenland, and the Law Dome site in coastal Antarctica. The deglacial climate is represented by three 30 year time slice simulations of 10 000 BP (years before present = 1950 CE), 11 000 and 12 000 BP, compared with a preindustrial control simulation. The model used is the ECHAM5-HAM atmospheric aerosol-climate model, driven with sea-surface temperatures and sea ice cover simulated using the CSIRO Mk3L coupled climate system model. The focus is on isolating the 10Be production signal, driven by solar variability, from the weather- or climate-driven noise in the 10Be deposition flux during different stages of climate. The production signal varies at lower frequencies, dominated by the 11 year solar cycle within the 30 year timescale of these experiments. The climatic noise is of higher frequencies than 11 years during the 30 year period studied. We first apply empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis to global 10Be deposition on the annual scale and find that the first principal component, consisting of the spatial pattern of mean 10Be deposition and the temporally varying solar signal, explains 64% of the variability. The following principal components are closely related to those of precipitation. Then, we apply ensemble empirical decomposition (EEMD) analysis to the time series of 10Be deposition at GRIP and at Law Dome, which is an effective method for adaptively decomposing the time series into different frequency components. The low-frequency components and the long-term trend represent production and have reduced noise compared to the entire frequency spectrum of the deposition. The high-frequency components represent climate-driven noise related to the seasonal cycle of e.g. precipitation and are closely connected to high frequencies of precipitation. These results firstly show that the 10Be atmospheric production signal is preserved in the deposition flux to surface even during climates very different from today's both in global data and at two specific locations. Secondly, noise can be effectively reduced from 10Be deposition data by simply applying the EOF analysis in the case of a reasonably large number of available data sets, or by decomposing the individual data sets to filter out high-frequency fluctuations.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Heikkila, U
Shi, Xue
Phipps, Steven J
Smith, A M
author_facet Heikkila, U
Shi, Xue
Phipps, Steven J
Smith, A M
author_sort Heikkila, U
title 10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition
title_short 10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition
title_full 10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition
title_fullStr 10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition
title_full_unstemmed 10Be in late deglacial climate simulated by ECHAM5-HAM - Part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10Be deposition
title_sort 10be in late deglacial climate simulated by echam5-ham - part 2: isolating the solar signal from 10be deposition
publisher Research Online
publishDate 2014
url https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1812
https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2830&context=smhpapers
long_lat ENVELOPE(112.833,112.833,-66.733,-66.733)
geographic Greenland
Law Dome
geographic_facet Greenland
Law Dome
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Greenland
GRIP
Sea ice
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Greenland
GRIP
Sea ice
op_source Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health - Papers: part A
op_relation https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1812
https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2830&context=smhpapers
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