Contribution of warm and moist atmospheric flow to a record minimum July sea ice extent of the Arctic in 2020

Author:

Liang Yu,Bi Haibo,Huang Haijun,Lei Ruibo,Liang Xi,Cheng BinORCID,Wang Yunhe

Abstract

Abstract. The satellite observations unveiled that the July sea ice extent of the Arctic shrank to the lowest value, since 1979, in 2020 with a major ice retreat in the Eurasian shelf seas including Kara, Laptev, and East Siberian seas. Based on the ERA-5 reanalysis products, we explored the impacts of warm and moist air-mass transport on this extreme event. The results revealed that anomalously high energy and moisture converged into these regions in the spring months (April to June) of 2020, leading to a burst of high moisture content and warming within the atmospheric column. The convergence is accompanied by local enhanced downward longwave surface radiation and turbulent fluxes, which is favorable for initiating an early melt onset in the region with severe ice loss. Once the melt begins, solar radiation plays a decisive role in leading to further sea ice depletion due to ice–albedo positive feedback. The typical trajectories of the synoptic cyclones that occurred on the Eurasian side in spring 2020 agree well with the path of atmospheric flow. Assessments suggest that variations in characteristics of the spring cyclones are conducive to the severe melt of sea ice. We argue that large-scale atmospheric circulation and synoptic cyclones acted in concert to trigger the exceptional poleward transport of total energy and moisture from April to June to cause this record minimum of sea ice extent in the following July.

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Center for Ocean Mega-Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Academy of Finland

Publisher

Copernicus GmbH

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology

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