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Extremes of summer Arctic sea ice reduction investigated with a rare event algorithm

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posted on 2025-07-24, 15:59 authored by Jerome Sauer, Jonathan Demaeyer, Giuseppe Zappa, François Massonnet, Francesco RagoneFrancesco Ragone
<p dir="ltr">Various studies identified possible drivers of extremes of Arctic sea ice reduction, such as observed in the summers of 2007 and 2012, including preconditioning, local feedback mechanisms, oceanic heat transport and the synoptic- and large-scale atmospheric circulations. However, a robust quantitative statistical analysis of extremes of sea ice reduction is hindered by the small number of events that can be sampled in observations and numerical simulations with computationally expensive climate models. Recent studies tackled the problem of sampling climate extremes by using rare event algorithms, i.e., computational techniques developed in statistical physics to reduce the computational cost required to sample rare events in numerical simulations. Here we apply a rare event algorithm to ensemble simulations with the intermediate complexity coupled climate model PlaSim-LSG to investigate extreme negative summer pan-Arctic sea ice area anomalies under pre-industrial greenhouse gas conditions. Owing to the algorithm, we estimate return times of extremes orders of magnitude larger than feasible with direct sampling, and we compute statistically significant composite maps of dynamical quantities conditional on the occurrence of these extremes. We find that extremely low sea ice summers in PlaSim-LSG are associated with preconditioning through the winter sea ice-ocean state, with enhanced downward longwave radiation due to an anomalously moist and warm spring Arctic atmosphere and with enhanced downward sensible heat fluxes during the spring-summer transition. As a consequence of these three processes, the sea ice-albedo feedback becomes active in spring and leads to an amplification of pre-existing sea ice area anomalies during summer.</p>

Funding

FSR Seedfund program and by the French Community of Belgium as part of a FRIA (Fund for research training in industry and agriculture) grant

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Comp' & Math' Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Climate Dynamics

Volume

62

Issue

6

Pagination

5219 - 5237

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

0930-7575

eissn

1432-0894

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-07-24

Language

en

Deposited by

Mr Francesco Ragone

Deposit date

2025-06-23

Data Access Statement

The data required to reproduce the results of this paper are freely available on the Zenodo platform (Sauer et al. 2023).

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