4.6 Article

Impact of atmospheric forcing uncertainties on Arctic and Antarctic sea icesimulations in CMIP6 OMIP models

Journal

CRYOSPHERE
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 1935-1965

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/tc-17-1935-2023

Keywords

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Atmospheric reanalyses are important for driving ocean-sea ice models and reconstructions of the polar ocean-sea ice system. Biases in the representation of sea ice in these reanalyses have been observed. This study investigates the sea ice concentration budget, surface fluxes, and ice drift simulations in different models to understand the improvements in the updated Japanese atmospheric reanalysis compared to a previous reanalysis. The findings suggest that changes in surface heat and wind fluxes play a significant role in reducing biases and improving the simulations in the Arctic and Antarctic regions.
Atmospheric reanalyses are valuable datasets for driving ocean-sea ice general circulation models and for proposing multidecadal reconstructions of the ocean-sea ice system in polar regions. However, these reanalyses exhibit biases in these regions. It was previously found that the representation of Arctic and Antarctic sea ice in models participating in the Ocean Model Intercomparison Project Phase 2 (OMIP2, using the updated Japanese 55-year atmospheric reanalysis, JRA55-do) was significantly more realistic than in OMIP1 (forced by the atmospheric state from the Coordinated Ocean-ice Reference Experiments version 2, CORE-II). To understand why, we study the sea ice concentration budget and its relations to surface heat and momentum fluxes as well as the connections between the simulated ice drift and the ice concentration, the ice thickness and the wind stress in a subset of three models (CMCC-CM2-SR5, MRI-ESM2-0 and NorESM2-LM). These three models are representative of the ensemble and are the only ones to provide the surface fluxes and the tendencies of ice concentrations attributed to dynamic and thermodynamic processes required for the ice concentration budget analysis. The sea ice simulations of two other models (EC-Earth3 and MIROC6) forced by both CORE-II and JRA55-do reanalysis are also included in the analysis. It is found that negative summer biases in high-ice-concentration regions and positive biases in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA) and central Weddell Sea (CWS) regions are reduced from OMIP1 to OMIP2 due to surface heat flux changes. Net shortwave radiation fluxes provide key improvements in the Arctic interior, CAA and CWS regions. There is also an influence of improved surface wind stress in OMIP2 giving better winter Antarctic ice concentration and the Arctic ice drift magnitude simulations near the ice edge. The ice velocity direction simulations in the Beaufort Gyre and the Pacific and Atlantic sectors of the Southern Ocean in OMIP2 are also improved owing to surface wind stress changes. This study provides clues on how improved atmospheric reanalysis products influence sea ice simulations. Our findings suggest that attention should be paid to the radiation fluxes and winds in atmospheric reanalyses in polar regions.

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