APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session N4: Invited Session: Climate as a Complex Dynamical System
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Room: Ballroom IV
Sponsoring
Unit:
GPC
Chair: John Wettlaufer, Yale University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.MAR.N4.1
Abstract: N4.00001 : Changes in Polar Sea Ice and How They Illustrate the Complex Picture of Global Climate Change
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Claire Parkinson
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Sea ice spreads over
vast areas of the polar oceans, typically covering 17-28 million km2
globally. It is a critical element of the Arctic and Antarctic climate
systems, with two of its most important roles being the reflection of solar
radiation back to space and the hindering of exchanges of heat, mass, and
momentum between the ocean and the atmosphere. Prior to the development of
satellite technology, it was not feasible to obtain large-scale data records
of the vast expanse of global sea ice. However, with satellites, and
especially with multichannel passive-microwave satellite data available
since late 1978, we can now monitor both Arctic and Antarctic sea ice
coverages on a daily basis, irrespective of sunlight or darkness and under
cloudy as well as cloud-free conditions. This has made sea ice one of the
best observed climate variables since the late 1970s. The resulting
satellite record has revealed many details of the seasonal cycle of the ice
cover in both polar regions, considerable inter-annual variability, and
long-term trends that show a decrease in the Arctic sea ice and an increase
in the Antarctic sea ice since late 1978. The decreases in the Arctic sea
ice extents, which have averaged approximately 51,000 km2 per year on a
yearly-average basis, were predicted and are tied closely to the warming of
the Arctic over the same time period. The increases in the Antarctic sea ice
extents, which have averaged approximately 17,000 km2 per year, have come
with stark spatial contrasts that suggest the likely impact of changes in
atmospheric and/or oceanic circulations. Sea ice decreases in the vicinity
of the Antarctic Peninsula, where warming has occurred, have been more than
compensated for by increases in the ice cover elsewhere around the
continent, especially in the Ross Sea. The patterns are suggestive of
increased cyclonic flow centered over the Amundsen Sea, although more
research is needed before the changes will be fully understood.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.MAR.N4.1