Publication | Closed Access
Sea ice, high‐latitude convection, and equable climates
101
Citations
16
References
2008
Year
EngineeringClimate ModelingEarth ScienceClimate PhysicsAtmospheric ScienceNcar Column ModelDeep Atmospheric ConvectionClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityClimate SciencesMeteorologyIce-water SystemPolar NightSea IceCryosphereClimate SystemEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatology
It is argued that deep atmospheric convection might occur during winter in ice‐free high‐latitude oceans, and that the surface radiative warming effects of the clouds and water vapor associated with this winter convection could keep high‐latitude oceans ice‐free through polar night. In such an ice‐free high‐latitude ocean the annual‐mean SST would be much higher and the seasonal cycle would be dramatically reduced ‐ making potential implications for equable climates manifest. The constraints that atmospheric heat transport, ocean heat transport, and CO 2 concentration place on this mechanism are established. These ideas are investigated using the NCAR column model, which has state‐of‐the‐art atmospheric physics parameterizations, high vertical resolution, a full seasonal cycle, a thermodynamic sea ice model, and a mixed layer ocean.
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