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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-09-27
    Description: A new global climate model setup using FESOM2.0 for the sea ice-ocean component and ECHAM6.3 for the atmosphere and land surface has been developed. Replacing FESOM1.4 by FESOM2.0 promises a higher efficiency of the new climate setup compared to its predecessor. The new setup allows for long-term climate integrations using a locally eddy-resolving ocean. Here it is evaluated in terms of (1) the mean state and long-term drift under preindustrial climate conditions, (2) the fidelity in simulating the historical warming, and (3) differences between coarse and eddy-resolving ocean configurations. The results show that the realism of the new climate setup is overall within the range of existing models. In terms of oceanic temperatures, the historical warming signal is of smaller amplitude than the model drift in case of a relatively short spin-up. However, it is argued that the strategy of “de-drifting” climate runs after the short spin-up, proposed by the HighResMIP protocol, allows one to isolate the warming signal. Moreover, the eddy-permitting/resolving ocean setup shows notable improvements regarding the simulation of oceanic surface temperatures, in particular in the Southern Ocean.
    Keywords: 551.6 ; FESOM ; ocean model ; climate model ; unstructured mesh ; Finite Volume
    Language: English
    Type: map
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-03-23
    Description: Many state‐of‐the‐art climate models do not simulate the Atlantic Water (AW) layer in the Arctic Ocean realistically enough to address the question of future Arctic Atlantification and its associated feedback. Biases concerning the AW layer are commonly related to insufficient resolution and excessive mixing in the ocean component as well as unrealistic Atlantic‐Arctic Ocean exchange. Based on sensitivity experiments with FESOM1.4, the ocean–sea‐ice component of the global climate model AWI‐CM1, we show that even if all impediments for simulating AW realistically are addressed in the ocean model, new biases in the AW layer develop after coupling to an atmosphere model. By replacing the wind forcing over the Arctic with winds from a coupled simulation we show that a common bias in the atmospheric sea level pressure (SLP) gradient and its associated wind bias lead to differences in surface stress and Ekman transport. Fresh surface water gets redistributed leading to changes in halosteric height distribution. Those changes lead to strengthening of the anticyclonic surface circulation in the Canadian Basin, so that the deep counterflow carrying warm AW gets reversed and a warm bias in the Canadian Basin develops. The SLP and anticyclonic wind bias in the Nordic Seas weaken the cyclonic circulation leading to reduced AW transport into the Arctic Ocean through Fram Strait but increased AW transport through the Barents Sea Opening. These effects together lead to a cold bias in the Eurasian Basin. An underestimation of sea ice concentration can significantly amplify the induced ocean biases.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Coupled global climate models are used to predict anthropogenic climate change along with its impacts. The Arctic has experienced amplified warming in the recent decades compared to global mean warming and therefore is one region of intense climate research. In this context Atlantification of the Arctic Ocean has become a high priority topic. Atlantification describes the increasing impact of oceanic heat from the Atlantic Water (AW) layer of the Arctic Ocean on the sea ice cover. In climate models, the direction and strength of simulated AW circulation around the Arctic Ocean is known to be sensitive to ocean grid resolution, parametrization, boundary and surface forcing or a combination thereof. Here we show that biases in the atmospheric component of climate models can interrupt and even reverse the simulated AW circulation at depth. Such biases can be further amplified by a negative bias in simulated sea ice cover. This study shows how these surface biases can negatively impact the deep ocean circulation.
    Description: Key Points: Many state‐of‐the‐art climate models fail to simulate the properties of the Atlantic Water layer in the Arctic Ocean realistically. Biases in Arctic sea level pressure and surface winds in atmosphere models can reverse Atlantic Water circulation. The underestimation of sea‐ice cover amplifies this problem further.
    Description: European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation program
    Description: Helmholtz Association http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100009318
    Keywords: ddc:551.46
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-07-18
    Description: Leading experts from various fields of German polar and marine research presented an executive summary of the MARE:N concept paper “Polar Regions in Transition” to the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). In 15 chapters, the paper presents recommendations on the areas in which polar and marine research should be particularly committed in the coming years. The BMBF will take up the recommendations at short notice, developing future research programmes in the context of pending political processes and national, European and international frameworks.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/report
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  • 4
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    In:  XXVIII General Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG)
    Publication Date: 2023-04-27
    Description: The continuing retreat of sea ice affects the Arctic mesoscale eddies, and its future evolution will strongly influence air-sea-ice interactions. However, knowledge of eddy activity is limited to sparse observations and coarse resolution models. How future eddies and their effects will evolve remains uncertain. Here, we apply the global unstructured model FESOM2 for 143 years of 4.5 km-Arctic simulations up to 2100 and 1 km-Arctic simulations for 5 years from 2010; 2090 to reveal the interactions between eddies, winds, sea ice and the energy budget of eddy kinetic energy (EKE) in a high resolution view. We demonstrate a significant increase in future Arctic EKE from 0-200 m, which is stronger in summer when sea ice melts. The future abundance of EKE can be explained by an increase in winter eddy generation and a decrease in summer eddy dissipation. This also leads to an enhancement of the horizontal velocity field, thus filling the Arctic Ocean with eddies in the future.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 5
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    In:  XXVIII General Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG)
    Publication Date: 2023-07-19
    Description: Marine heatwaves are on the rise: their frequency, intensity, and duration are expected to increase in a warming world. Yet it remains unclear whether local feedback processes could amplify extreme ocean temperatures. A prominent marine heatwave recently occurred in the Northeast Pacific Ocean in summer 2019, exhibiting the highest sea surface temperatures ever recorded in this area since the availability of satellite observations in 1979. Here, we use fully-coupled model experiments, termed “nudged storylines”, in which the evolution of large-scale winds in the free troposphere is nudged to the observed (reanalysed) one before and during the summer 2019 event, to generate close analogues of this record-breaking marine heatwave for past, present, and plausible future climates. We show in particular that future climate analogues of the marine heatwave may warm 50% more than what is expected from the projected global-mean ocean warming. Together with the rapid Northeast Pacific mean warming, air-sea feedback processes lead to a projected warming amplification of 1°C above the 1.9°C global-mean ocean temperature rise. Primary drivers of this amplification are a reduction in clouds and ocean mixed-layer depth, as well as anomalous air advection from fast-warming subpolar regions. Our results show that marine heatwave temperatures may warm substantially faster than the global and regional background temperature, increasing the stress on local ecosystems and fishery resources.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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