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Snow on Arctic Sea Ice in a Warming Climate as Simulated in CESM
- Source :
- Journal of Geophysical Research. Oceans
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2021.
-
Abstract
- Earth system models are valuable tools for understanding how the Arctic snow‐ice system and the feedbacks therein may respond to a warming climate. In this analysis, we investigate snow on Arctic sea ice to better understand how snow conditions may change under different forcing scenarios. First, we use in situ, airborne, and satellite observations to assess the realism of the Community Earth System Model (CESM) in simulating snow on Arctic sea ice. CESM versions one and two are evaluated, with V1 being the Large Ensemble experiment (CESM1‐LE) and V2 being configured with low‐ and high‐top atmospheric components. The assessment shows CESM2 underestimates snow depth and produces overly uniform snow distributions, whereas CESM1‐LE produces a highly variable, excessively‐thick snow cover. Observations indicate that snow in CESM2 accumulates too slowly in autumn, too quickly in winter‐spring, and melts too soon and rapidly in late spring. The 1950–2050 trends in annual mean snow depths are markedly smaller in CESM2 (−0.8 cm decade−1) than in CESM1‐LE (−3.6 cm decade−1) due to CESM2 having less snow overall. A perennial, thick sea‐ice cover, cool summers, and excessive summer snowfall facilitate a thicker, longer‐lasting snow cover in CESM1‐LE. Under the SSP5‐8.5 forcing scenario, CESM2 shows that, compared to present‐day, snow on Arctic sea ice will: (1) undergo enhanced, earlier spring melt, (2) accumulate less in summer‐autumn, (3) sublimate more, and (4) facilitate marginally more snow‐ice formation. CESM2 also reveals that summers with snow‐free ice can occur ∼30–60 years before an ice‐free central Arctic, which may promote faster sea‐ice melt.<br />Key Points CESM2 (CESM1‐LE) snow depths on Arctic sea ice are thinner (thicker) than observed depthsThe 1950–2050 trends in annual mean snow depth on Arctic sea ice are −0.8 and −3.6 cm decade−1 in CESM2 and CESM1‐LE, respectivelyCESM2 shows enhanced earlier snowmelt, less snow accumulation, more sublimation, and slightly more snow‐ice formation in future decades
- Subjects :
- Leads
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Forcing (mathematics)
Biogeosciences
Oceanography
01 natural sciences
Global Change from Geodesy
Arctic
Volcanic Hazards and Risks
Oceans
Sea Level Change
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
Disaster Risk Analysis and Assessment
geography.geographical_feature_category
Climate and Interannual Variability
Climate Impact
climate change
Geophysics
Earthquake Ground Motions and Engineering Seismology
Explosive Volcanism
Earth System Modeling
Atmospheric Processes
Ocean Monitoring with Geodetic Techniques
Ocean/Atmosphere Interactions
Atmospheric
Regional Modeling
Global Climate Models
Volcanology
Hydrological Cycles and Budgets
Decadal Ocean Variability
Land/Atmosphere Interactions
Geochemistry and Petrology
Spring (hydrology)
Geodesy and Gravity
Global Change
Air/Sea Interactions
Numerical Modeling
climate
Solid Earth
Geological
Community Earth System Model version 2 (CESM2) Special Collection
Ocean/Earth/atmosphere/hydrosphere/cryosphere interactions
Water Cycles
Modeling
Avalanches
Volcano Seismology
Snow
Benefit‐cost Analysis
The arctic
Earth system science
Space and Planetary Science
Satellite
Computational Geophysics
Regional Climate Change
Natural Hazards
Abrupt/Rapid Climate Change
Informatics
Glaciology
Surface Waves and Tides
Atmospheric Composition and Structure
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
Volcano Monitoring
Snow and Ice
Seismology
Climatology
Radio Oceanography
Sea Ice
Gravity and Isostasy
Marine Geology and Geophysics
Physical Modeling
Earth system model
Oceanography: General
Cryospheric Change
Cryosphere
Impacts of Global Change
Oceanography: Physical
Research Article
Risk
Oceanic
Theoretical Modeling
Climate change
Radio Science
Tsunamis and Storm Surges
Polynas
Paleoceanography
Ice Mechanics and Air/Sea/Ice Exchange Processes
Climate Dynamics
Sea ice
Numerical Solutions
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Climate Change and Variability
geography
Effusive Volcanism
Climate Variability
Ice
General Circulation
Policy Sciences
Climate Impacts
Arctic ice pack
Mud Volcanism
Air/Sea Constituent Fluxes
Mass Balance
Ocean influence of Earth rotation
13. Climate action
Volcano/Climate Interactions
Environmental science
Hydrology
Sea Level: Variations and Mean
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21699291 and 21699275
- Volume :
- 126
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....73f291961dcb50301696e7245ec68d0f