Author:
Kim Byeong-Hoon,Seo Ki-Weon,Eom Jooyoung,Chen Jianli,Wilson Clark R.
Abstract
AbstractAntarctic ice mass balance is determined by precipitation and ice discharge, and understanding their relative contributions to contemporary Antarctic ice mass change is important to project future ice mass loss and resulting sea level rise. There has been evidence that anomalous precipitation affects Antarctic ice mass loss estimates, and thus the precipitation contribution should be understood and considered in future projections. In this study, we revisit changes in Antarctic ice mass over recent decades and examine precipitation contributions over this period. We show that accumulated (time-integrated) precipitation explains most inter-annual anomalies of Antarctic ice mass change during the GRACE period (2003–2017). From 1979 to 2017, accumulated Antarctic precipitation contributes to significant ice mass loss acceleration in the Pacific sector and deceleration in the Atlantic-Indian Sectors, forming a bi-polar spatial pattern. Principal component analysis reveals that such a bi-polar pattern is likely modulated by the Southern Annular Mode (SAM). We also find that recent ice mass loss acceleration in 2007 is related to a variation in precipitation accumulation. Overall ice discharge has accelerated at a steady rate since 1992, but has not seen a recent abrupt increase.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Korea Institute of Marine Science and Technology promotion
NASA GRACE and GRACE Follow-On Project
National Geospatial Intelligence Agency and NASA Earth Surface and Interior Program
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
16 articles.
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