4.7 Article

New insight into the influence of the Greenland high on summer Arctic sea ice

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac7ac6

Keywords

Greenland high; summer Arctic sea ice; shortwave radiation; wind-driven ice drift

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFC1509104, 2021YFC2802504]
  2. Innovation Group Project of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) [311021008]

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The Greenland high has a significant influence on Greenland ice sheet melting and summer Arctic sea ice. In this study, it is found that an intensified Greenland high in early summer leads to a decline in sea ice concentration and thickness over the Beaufort Sea. This decline is primarily due to thermodynamic and mechanical redistribution processes. The intensified Greenland high increases subsidence over the Canadian Basin and easterly wind frequency over the Beaufort Sea, pushing the sea ice away from the coastlines and resulting in increased open water areas.
The Greenland high (GL-high) coincides with a local center of action of the summer North Atlantic Oscillation and is known to have significant influence on Greenland ice sheet melting and summer Arctic sea ice. However, the mechanism behind the influence on regional Arctic sea ice is not yet clear. In this study, using reanalysis datasets and satellite observations, the influence of the GL-high in early summer on Arctic sea ice variability, and the mechanism behind it, are investigated. In response to an intensified GL-high, sea ice over the Beaufort Sea shows significant decline in both concentration and thickness from June through September. This decline in sea ice is primarily due to thermodynamic and mechanical redistribution processes. Firstly, the intensified GL-high increases subsidence over the Canadian Basin, leading to an increase in surface air temperature by adiabatic heating, and a substantial decrease in cloud cover and thus increased downward shortwave radiation. Secondly, the intensified GL-high increases easterly wind frequency and wind speed over the Beaufort Sea, pushing sea ice over the Canadian Basin away from the coastlines. Both processes contribute to an increase in open water areas, amplifying ice-albedo feedback and leading to sea ice decline. The mechanism identified here differs from previous studies that focused on northward moisture and heat transport and the associated increase in downward longwave radiation over the Arctic. The impact of the GL-high on the regional sea ice (also Arctic sea ice extent) can persist from June into fall, providing an important source for seasonal prediction of Arctic sea ice. The GL-high has an upward trend and reached a record high in 2012 that coincided with a record minimum summer Arctic sea ice extent, and has strong implications for summer Arctic sea ice changes.

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