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Constraints on simulated past Arctic amplification and lapse-rate feedback from observations

Authors :
Olivia Linke
Johannes Quaas
Finja Baumer
Sebastian Becker
Jan Chylik
Sandro Dahlke
André Ehrlich
Dörthe Handorf
Christoph Jacobi
Heike Kalesse-Los
Luca Lelli
Sina Mehrdad
Roel A. J. Neggers
Johannes Riebold
Pablo Saavedra Garfias
Niklas Schnierstein
Matthew D. Shupe
Chris Smith
Gunnar Spreen
Baptiste Verneuil
Kameswara S. Vinjamuri
Marco Vountas
Manfred Wendisch
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Arctic has warmed much more than the global mean during past decades. The lapse-rate feedback (LRF) has been identified as large contributor to the Arctic amplification (AA) of climate change. This particular feedback arises from the vertically non-uniform warming of the troposphere, which in the Arctic emerges as strong near-surface, and muted free-tropospheric warming. Stable stratification and meridional energy transport are two characteristic processes that are evoked as causes for this vertical warming structure. Our aim is to constrain these governing processes by making use of detailed observations in combination with the large climate model ensemble of the 6th Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6). We build on the result that CMIP6 models show a large scatter in Arctic LRF and AA, which are positively correlated for the historical period 1951–2014. Thereby, we present process-oriented constraints by linking characteristics of the current climate to historical climate simulations. In particular, we compare a large consortium of present-day observations to co-located model data from subsets with weak and strong simulated AA and Arctic LRF in the past. Our results firstly suggest that local Arctic processes mediating the lower thermodynamic structure of the atmosphere are more realistically depicted in climate models with weak Arctic LRF and AA (CMIP6/w) in the past. In particular, CMIP6/w models show stronger inversions at the end of the simulation period (2014) for boreal fall and winter, which is more consistent with the observations. This result is based on radiosonde observations from the year-long MOSAiC expedition in the central Arctic, together with long-term radio soundings at the Utqiaǵvik site in Alaska, USA, and dropsonde measurements from aircraft campaigns in the Fram Strait. Secondly, remote influences that can further mediate the warming structure in the free troposphere are more realistically represented by models with strong simulated Arctic LRF and AA (CMIP6/s) in the past. In particular, CMIP6/s models systemically simulate a stronger Arctic energy transport convergence in the present climate for boreal fall and winter, which is more consistent with reanalysis results. Locally, we find links between changes in transport pathways and vertical warming structures that favor a positive LRF in the CMIP6/s simulations. This hints to the mediating influence of advection on the Arctic LRF. We emphasise that one major attempt of this work is to give insights in different perspectives on the Arctic LRF. We present a variety of contributions from a large collaborative research consortium to ultimately find synergy among them in support of advancing our understanding of the Arctic LRF.

Subjects

Subjects :
models
Arctic
lapse rate
feedbacks

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4afe0673b6f9633f5862ebd7d302fd3f