Journal Article10.5194/tc-17-3667-2023
Statistically parameterizing and evaluating a positive degree-day model to estimate surface melt in Antarctica from 1979 to 2022
Yaowen Zheng,Nicholas R. Golledge,Alexandra Gossart,Ghislain Picard,Marion Leduc-Leballeur +4 more
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TL;DR: A novel grid-cell-level spatially distributed positive degree-day model for estimating surface melt in Antarctica from 1979 to 2022 is developed and evaluated. The model accurately estimates surface melt and exhibits nonlinear sensitivity to air temperature perturbations.
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Abstract: Abstract. Surface melting is one of the primary drivers of ice shelf collapse in Antarctica and is expected to increase in the future as the global climate continues to warm because there is a statistically significant positive relationship between air temperature and melting. Enhanced surface melt will impact the mass balance of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) and, through dynamic feedbacks, induce changes in global mean sea level (GMSL). However, the current understanding of surface melt in Antarctica remains limited in terms of the uncertainties in quantifying surface melt and understanding the driving processes of surface melt in past, present and future contexts. Here, we construct a novel grid-cell-level spatially distributed positive degree-day (PDD) model, forced with 2 m air temperature reanalysis data and spatially parameterized by minimizing the error with respect to satellite estimates and surface energy balance (SEB) model outputs on each computing cell over the period 1979 to 2022. We evaluate the PDD model by performing a goodness-of-fit test and cross-validation. We assess the accuracy of our parameterization method, based on the performance of the PDD model when considering all computing cells as a whole, independently of the time window chosen for parameterization. We conduct a sensitivity experiment by adding ±10 % to the training data (satellite estimates and SEB model outputs) used for PDD parameterization and a sensitivity experiment by adding constant temperature perturbations (+1, +2, +3, +4 and +5 ∘C) to the 2 m air temperature field to force the PDD model. We find that the PDD melt extent and amounts change analogously to the variations in the training data with steady statistically significant correlations and that the PDD melt amounts increase nonlinearly with the temperature perturbations, demonstrating the consistency of our parameterization and the applicability of the PDD model to warmer climate scenarios. Within the limitations discussed, we suggest that an appropriately parameterized PDD model can be a valuable tool for exploring Antarctic surface melt beyond the satellite era.
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Citations
Changes in Antarctic surface conditions and potential for ice shelf hydrofracturing from 1850 to 2200
Nicolas C. Jourdain,Charles Amory,Christoph Kittel,Gaël Durand +3 more
- 08 Feb 2024
TL;DR: Changes in Antarctic surface conditions and potential for ice shelf hydrofracturing from 1850 to 2200. The surface mass balance and runoff of a regional climate model are emulated to provide surface mass balance and runoff for ice sheet models. The contribution of surface mass balance to sea level rise is found to be 0.4 to 2.2 cm from 1900 to 2010 and -3.4 to -0.1 cm from 2100 to 2099 under the SSP1-2.6 scenario. The emergence of surface conditions prone to hydrofracturing is also identified.
Comment on egusphere-2024-58
11 Mar 2024
TL;DR: A simple method to emulate spatio-temporal variability of Antarctic ice sheet surface mass balance and runoff in regional climate models. The method is useful to constrain ice sheet model ensembles and estimate sea level rise contributions.
Reply on RC2
Nicolas Jourdain
- 20 Jun 2024
TL;DR: A simple method to extend MAR simulations to other periods and scenarios and constrain ice sheet model ensembles. Surface mass balance and runoff are emulated using a mixed statistical-physical approach. Sea level rise contribution from surface mass balance is found to be 0.4 to 2.2 cm from 1900 to 2010 and -3.4 to -0.1 cm from 2100 to 2099 under the SSP1-2.6 scenario.
Annual and Interannual Oscillations of Greenland’s Ice Sheet Mass Variations from GRACE/GRACE-FO, Linked with Climatic Indices and Meteorological Parameters
Darrozes Jose,Llubes, Muriel,Seoane, Lucia,Ramillien, Guillaume +3 more
Abstract: The ongoing global warming threatens the Greenland Ice Sheet (GIS), which has exhibited an overall mass loss since 1990. This loss varies annually and interannually, reflecting the intricate interactions between the ice sheet and atmospheric and oceanic circulations. We investigate GIS mass balance variations (2002–2024) using data from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) and its Follow-On (GRACE-FO) missions. Monthly mass anomalies from the International Combination Service for Time-variable Gravity Fields (COST-G) solution are compared with cumulative climate indices (North Atlantic Oscillation—NAO, Greenland Blocking Index—GBI, Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation—AMO) and meteorological parameters (temperature, precipitation, surface albedo). Empirical Orthogonal Function analysis reveals five principal modes of variations, the first capturing annual and interannual frequencies (4–7 and 11 years), while subsequent modes only describe interannual frequencies. Wavelet analysis shows significant annual correlations between GIS mass changes and temperature (r = −0.88), NAO (r = 0.74), and GBI (r = −0.85). An annual cycle connects GIS mass changes, climatic indices, and meteorological parameters, while interannual variations highlight the role of the AMO and the NAO. The presence of an 11-year periodicity with the mass variations for NAO, GBI, and temperature strongly correlates with solar activity.
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