Atmospheric destabilization leads to Arctic Ocean winter surface wind intensification


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martina.zapponini [ at ] awi.de

Abstract

The surface-amplified winter warming over the Arctic Ocean is accompanied by a pronounced intensification of near-surface winds, simulated by climate models and emerging in reanalysis data. Here, the influences of sea-ice decline, wind changes aloft, and atmospheric stability are revisited based on CMIP6 historical and high-emission scenario and ERA5 reanalysis data. Spatial trend patterns suggest that near-surface wind intensification over the inner Arctic Ocean in winter is largely driven by an increasing downward momentum transfer due to a weakening atmospheric stratification. In contrast, a near-surface wind intensification in summer appears to be largely driven by accelerating winds aloft, amplified in a high-emission future by decreasing surface roughness due to sea-ice decline. In both seasons, differences in near-surface wind-speed trends are closely linked to atmospheric stability trends. Models suggest that by 2100 the lower troposphere may become as unstable in winter as in summer, implying a fundamental regime shift of the Arctic winter boundary layer.



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Article
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Primary Division
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Published
Eprint ID
59008
DOI 10.1038/s43247-024-01428-1

Cite as
Zapponini, M. and Goessling, H. F. (2024): Atmospheric destabilization leads to Arctic Ocean winter surface wind intensification , Communications Earth & Environment, 5 (1), p. 262 . doi: 10.1038/s43247-024-01428-1


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