Proposed CMIP
Sub-Project :
Arctic Climate, Atmospheric
Circulation And Ocean Warming
Leonid P.Bobylev1,
Svetlana I. Kuzmina1,.Genrikh
V.Alekseev2, Ola M.
Johannessen3, Lennart Bengtsson4
1Nansen International Environmental and Remote Sensing
Center, St. Petersburg, 197061, Russia,
2Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, St. Petersburg, 199397, Russia.
3Nansen
Environmental and Remote Sensing Center, Bergen, 5059, Norway,
4Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, 20146, Germany,
svetlana.kuzmina@niersc.spb.ru
Background.
Recent modeling studies
indicated that greenhouse global warming should be
enhanced in the Arctic. An enhanced
Arctic response is seen in general circulation models for different sorts of
external forcing such as changes in solar irradiation and changes in the
concentration of greenhouse gases. Modeling results demonstrated
that there was a connection between tropical sea surface temperature
anomalies, intensification of mid-latitude westerlies
(e.g. North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)) and Arctic surface temperature
anomalies. Another intriguing observation is the lack of correlation or rather
negative correlation
between NAO and Arctic
SAT 1890-1950. Observations
suggest that Arctic Oscillation, and the more spatially confined NAO, have
exhibited a positive trend since the early 1980s and it is speculated that this
may be related to global warming. At the same time in many previous and recent
works it was shown that recent climate change could be interpreted in terms of
changes in the frequency of occurrence of natural atmospheric circulation
regimes. The extent to which forced climate change pattern and the unforced
modes of variation are determined by the same mechanisms and feedbacks remains
to be determined.
The main objective is to
assess atmospheric circulation modes and related climate variations in the Arctic
and sub-Arctic over natural and anthropogenic forcing.
Content of
study
- Analysis of results of coupled global and regional GCMs together with observational data in order to
estimate the climate variation modes and related temperature changes in
the Arctic and sub-Arctic.
- Quantitative assessment of the variations of the sea ice
parameters related to the changes in the atmospheric thermal and
circulation regimes.
- Assessment of natural and anthropogenic components in previous and
future climate changes in the Arctic.
Research will be focused on:
Analysis of the performance of the CMIP2 runs in order to :
·
Explore the large scale processes behind an Arctic warming , the relation between NAO
in the models and the Arctic warming.
·
Determine model teleconnections between climate change in the Arctic, mid-
and low latitudes, and the role of the tropical oceans in a warming in
the Arctic.
·
Evaluate different
mechanisms which could be responsible for the 1930s and latest warming in the Arctic.
The minimum data fields we need to have for a study of this
type (in addition to surface temperature, pressure and precipitation) are sea
ice (coverage and volume), 850, 500 and 200 height fields.