Does ocean coupling matter for the northern extratropical response to projected Arctic sea ice loss?

Clara Deser, Lantao Sun, Robert A. Tomas, James Screen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

145 Scopus citations

Abstract

The question of whether ocean coupling matters for the extratropical Northern Hemisphere atmospheric response to projected late 21st century Arctic sea ice loss is addressed using a series of experiments with Community Climate System Model version 4 at 1°spatial resolution under different configurations of the ocean model component: No interactive ocean, thermodynamic slab ocean, and full-depth (dynamic plus thermodynamic) ocean. Ocean-atmosphere coupling magnifies the response to Arctic sea ice loss but does not change its overall structure; however, a slab ocean is inadequate for inferring the role of oceanic feedbacks. The westerly winds along the poleward flank of the eddy-driven jet weaken in response to Arctic sea ice loss, accompanied by a smaller-magnitude strengthening on the equatorward side, with largest amplitudes in winter. Dynamical and thermodynamic oceanic feedbacks amplify this response by approximately 50%. Air temperature, precipitation, and sea level pressure responses also show sensitivity to the degree of ocean coupling.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2149-2157
Number of pages9
JournalGeophysical Research Letters
Volume43
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 16 2016

Keywords

  • Arctic sea ice
  • Northern Annular Mode
  • climate response

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