Causes and evolution of winter polynyas north of Greenland
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Published:2023-01-18
Issue:1
Volume:17
Page:233-253
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Lee Younjoo J.ORCID, Maslowski WieslawORCID, Cassano John J.ORCID, Clement Kinney Jaclyn, Craig Anthony P., Kamal Samy, Osinski RobertORCID, Seefeldt Mark W., Stroeve Julienne, Wang HailongORCID
Abstract
Abstract. During the 42-year period (1979–2020) of satellite
measurements, four major winter (December–March) polynyas have been
observed north of Greenland: one in December 1986 and three in the last
decade, i.e., February of 2011, 2017, and 2018. The 2018 polynya was
unparalleled in its magnitude and duration compared to the three previous
events. Given the apparent recent increase in the occurrence of these
extreme events, this study aims to examine their evolution and causality, in
terms of forced versus natural variability. The limited weather station and
remotely sensed sea ice data are analyzed combining with output from the
fully coupled Regional Arctic System Model (RASM), including one hindcast
and two ensemble simulations. We found that neither the accompanying
anomalous warm surface air intrusion nor the ocean below had an impact
(i.e., no significant ice melting) on the evolution of the observed winter
open-water episodes in the region. Instead, the extreme atmospheric wind
forcing resulted in greater sea ice deformation and transport offshore,
accounting for the majority of sea ice loss in all four polynyas. Our
analysis suggests that strong southerly winds (i.e., northward wind with
speeds greater than 10 m s−1) blowing persistently over the study
region for at least 2 d or more were required over the study region to
mechanically redistribute some of the thickest Arctic sea ice out of the
region and thus to create open-water areas (i.e., a latent heat polynya). To
assess the role of internal variability versus external forcing of such
events, we carried out and examined results from the two RASM ensembles
dynamically downscaled with output from the Community Earth System Model
(CESM) Decadal Prediction Large Ensemble (DPLE) simulations. Out of 100 winters in each of the two ensembles (initialized 30 years apart: one in
December 1985 and another in December 2015), 17 and 16 winter polynyas were
produced north of Greenland, respectively. The frequency of polynya
occurrence had no apparent sensitivity to the initial sea ice thickness in
the study area pointing to internal variability of atmospheric forcing as a
dominant cause of winter polynyas north of Greenland. We assert that
dynamical downscaling using a high-resolution regional climate model offers
a robust tool for process-level examination in space and time, synthesis
with limited observations, and probabilistic forecasts of Arctic events,
such as the ones being investigated here and elsewhere.
Funder
Office of Naval Research National Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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