4.7 Article

Predicting the Daily Sea Ice Concentration on a Subseasonal Scale of the Pan-Arctic During the Melting Season by a Deep Learning Model

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TGRS.2023.3279089

Keywords

Predictive models; Atmospheric modeling; Sea ice; Numerical models; Arctic; Ocean temperature; Data models; Deep learning; Pan-Arctic; physically constrained loss function; sea ice concentration (SIC) prediction; subseasonal scale

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Predicting the daily sea ice concentration (SIC) of the Pan-Arctic during the melting season is crucial but challenging. In this study, we propose a deep-learning-based data driven model, SICNet90, which utilizes historical SIC data to predict the SIC of the next 90 days. We also design a physically constrained loss function to optimize the model's prediction accuracy. Experimental results show that SICNet90 outperforms the Climatology benchmark, achieving a significant improvement in binary accuracy and mean absolute error. Additionally, the model exhibits a predictability barrier and challenge, which aligns with the autocorrelation of SIC. The use of historical SIC data and other environmental factors contribute to the prediction accuracy.
During the melting season, predicting the daily sea ice concentration (SIC) of the Pan-Arctic at a subseasonal scale is strongly required for economic activities and a challenging task for current studies. We propose a deep-learning-based data driven model to predict the 90 days SIC of the Pan-Arctic, named SICNet90. SICNet90 takes the historical 60 days' SIC and its anomaly and outputs the SIC of the next 90 days. We design a physically constrained loss function, normalized integrated ice-edge error (NIIEE), to constrain the SICNet(90's) optimization by the spatial morphology of SIC. The satellite-observed SIC trains (1991-2011/1997-2017) and tests the model (2012/2018-2020). For each test year, a 90-day SIC prediction is made daily from May 1 to July 2. The binary accuracy (BACC) of sea ice extent (SIC > 15%) and the mean absolute error (MAE) are evaluation metrics. Experiments show that SICNet90 significantly outperforms the Climatology benchmark on 90 days prediction, with a BACC/MAE improvement/reduction of 5.41%/1.35%. The data-driven model shows a late-spring-early-summer predictability barrier (around June 20) and a prediction challenge (around July 10), consistent with SIC's autocorrelation. The NIIEE loss optimizes the predictability barrier/challenge with a BACC increase of 4%. Using a 60 days historical SIC to predict 90 days SIC is better than a historical SIC of 30/90 days. The historical 2-m surface air temperature shows positive contributions to the prediction made from May 1 to mid-June, but negative contributions to the prediction made after mid-June. The historical sea surface temperature and 500 hp geopotential height show negative contributions.

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