Impact of Changing Arctic Sea Ice Extent, Sea Ice Age, and Snow Depth on Sea Salt Aerosol From Blowing Snow and the Open Ocean for 1980–2017

Author:

Confer K. L.1ORCID,Jaeglé L.1ORCID,Liston G. E.2ORCID,Sharma S.3ORCID,Nandan V.45ORCID,Yackel J.4ORCID,Ewert M.6ORCID,Horowitz H. M.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Washington Seattle WA USA

2. Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA

3. Environment and Climate Change Canada Science and Technology Branch Toronto ON Canada

4. Cryosphere Climate Research Group Department of Geography University of Calgary Calgary AB Canada

5. Centre for Earth Observation Science (CEOS) University of Manitoba Winnipeg MB Canada

6. School of Oceanography University of Washington Seattle WA USA

7. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

Abstract

AbstractWe evaluate the effects of rapidly changing Arctic sea ice conditions on sea salt aerosols (SSA) produced by oceanic wave‐breaking and the sublimation of wind‐lofted salty blowing snow on sea ice. We use the GEOS‐Chem chemical transport model to assess the influence of changing extent of the open ocean, multi‐year sea ice (MYI), first‐year sea ice (FYI), and snow depths on SSA emissions for 1980–2017. We combine snow depths from the Lagrangian snow‐evolution model (SnowModel‐LG) together with an empirically‐derived snow salinity function of snow depth to derive spatially and temporally varying snow surface salinity over Arctic FYI. We find that pan‐Arctic SSA surface mass concentrations have increased by 6%–12% decade−1 during the cold season (November–April) and by 7%–11% decade−1 during the warm season (May–October). The cold season trend is due to increasing blowing snow SSA originating from FYI: as MYI is replaced by FYI with thinning snow depths, snow surface salinity increases by more than 11% decade−1. During the warm season, rapid sea ice loss and thus increasing open ocean SSA are the cause of modeled SSA trends. Observations of SSA mass concentrations at Alert, Canada display positive trends during the cold season (10%–12% decade−1), consistent with our pan‐Arctic simulations. During fall, Alert observations show a negative trend (−18% decade−1), due to locally decreasing wind speeds and thus lower open ocean emissions. These significant changes in SSA concentrations could potentially affect past and future bromine explosions and Arctic climate feedbacks.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Arctic Tropospheric Ozone Trends;Geophysical Research Letters;2023-11-20

2. Blowing hot and cold;Nature Geoscience;2023-09

3. Polar oceans and sea ice in a changing climate;Elem Sci Anth;2023

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