1 / 27

Science Discipline Overview: Atmosphere (large-scale perspective)

Science Discipline Overview: Atmosphere (large-scale perspective) How might large-scale atmospheric challenges add to the scientific arguments for MOSAIC?. ISAC (International Study of Arctic Change) Science Plan

nash
Download Presentation

Science Discipline Overview: Atmosphere (large-scale perspective)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Science Discipline Overview: • Atmosphere (large-scale perspective) • How might large-scale atmospheric challenges • add to the scientific arguments for MOSAIC?

  2. ISAC (International Study of Arctic Change) Science Plan SEARCH (Study of Environmental Arctic Change): Recommendations for Understanding Arctic System Change (Workshop Report) Others (WCRP Predictability, IASC/Arctic in Rapid Transition,…) Sources

  3. What is the Arctic Ocean’s role as a source/sink of greenhouse gases, aerosol particles, and other chemical species? [ISAC]

  4. Postulated feedback involving DMS[http://me-www.jrc.it/dms/dms.html[

  5. Methane flares on the Arctic shelves: Is there a summer signature in the central Arctic [from N. Shakhova and I. Semiletov, IARC] 800 m

  6. Arctic seabed methane stores destabilizing, ventingShakhova and Semiletov (2010, Science)

  7. Are increases in midlatitudes being augmented or offset by exchanges at the surface of the Arctic Ocean? Is reduced sea ice cover (area and thickness) altering the Arctic Ocean’s role in the global carbon and sulfur budgets? Of particular interest: Dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and its role in cloudiness What is the Arctic Ocean’s role as a source/sink of greenhouse gases, aerosol particles, and other chemical species? [ISAC]

  8. How much has sea ice loss (area, thickness) contributed to polar amplification of the recent warming? [ISAC]

  9. Change in surface air temperature (°C), 1961-2010[from NASA GISS]ArcticAntarctic

  10. Sensible heat release from ocean (increased solar absorption) Changes in atmospheric humidity, cloudiness due to enhanced evaporation Increased influxes of atmospheric heat and moisture from lower latitudes Increased inflows of oceanic heat from the North Atlantic and North Pacific How much has sea ice loss (area, thickness) contributed to polar amplification of the recent warming? [ISAC]

  11. Can a station in the Arctic Ocean provide information relevant to springtime ozone depletion? [ISAC]

  12. Total column ozone measured by satellite[Bernhard et al., 2011, Arctic Report Card]

  13. Measurements of potential utility: Spectral distribution of downwelling radiation Upper atmosphere profiles Others? Can a station in the Arctic Ocean provide information relevant to springtime ozone depletion? [ISAC]

  14. Can field measurements support a linkage between reduced autumn ice coverage and wintertime atmospheric circulation anomalies affecting middle latitudes?

  15. Latitude-height section of temperature anomalies (135-225ºE)Oct-Dec, 2002-2008[Overland and Wang, 2010, Tellus]

  16. 1000-500 mb thickness anomaliesOct-Dec, 2002-2008[Overland and Wang, 2010, Tellus]

  17. Enhanced heating of upper ocean in recent summers is substantial (Perovich et al.) Subsequent release of heat to the atmosphere is not fully understood (i.e., temporal, vertical distributions) – but warming of the lower troposphere is strongly indicated Mechanisms linking midlatitude weather/climate anomalies to heating of Arctic troposphere need elucidation Can field measurements support a linkage between reduced autumn ice coverage and wintertime atmospheric circulation anomalies affecting middle latitudes?

  18. How much is the atmosphere contributing to the extreme ice retreat of recent summers? [ISAC]

  19. Satellite-derived cloud fractions, June-August[Stroeve et al., 2011, Climatic Change]

  20. % of sea ice retreat explained by wind (black, blue)downwelling longwave (green), and sensible hear flux convergence (red)[from Francis et al., 2005]

  21. Arctic Ocean temperatures from NABOS moorings, 2003-2009

  22. Factors to be included in quantitative diagnosis: Downwelling radiation anomalies (clouds, water vapor) Wind forcing/ice advection Atlantic and Pacific water inflows and Effects of changes in surface albedo How much is the atmosphere contributing to the extreme ice retreat of recent summers? [ISAC]

  23. How do storm events interact with the ice cover and upper ocean?-- effects of storms on the ice/ocean state-- effects of lower boundary changes on storms

  24. Polar low in Chukchi Sea (2009) Contours: geopotential height at 500 hPa; Color: SLP. The polar low developed after a synoptic scale cyclone intruded into the Chukchi Sea. Mirai soundings crucial to diagnosis, initialization of WRF Moreira et al. 2012

  25. Targeting special observations to enhance weather forecasts –the Norwegian IPY-THORPEX success (Kristjansson et al., 2011)special obs no special obs L L ← verifying analysis L

  26.  Atmospheric soundings from vicinity of polar low have been found to enhance regional model simulations of system  Surface fluxes should be important to the development of the system  Boundary layer parameterization packages are many – choice of most appropriate modules need observational guidance How do storm events interact with the ice cover and upper ocean?-- effects of storms on the ice/ocean state-- effects of lower boundary changes on storms

More Related