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An Observationally-Based Determination of the Arctic Sea Ice-Cloud Feedback Since 2000: Isolating the Arctic Cloud Response to Sea Ice LossArctic sea ice responds to and drives Arctic climate change. The interactions between Arctic sea ice and clouds represent a mechanism through which sea ice can drive climate change. We composite active remote sensing satellite cloud properties for ice-free, marginal ice zone (MIZ), and ice-covered surfaces during MIZ crossing events to investigate the influence of the transition from an ice-covered to an ice-free surface on low-level clouds. We demonstrate that the event-based methodology controls for large-scale meteorological factors and isolates the sea ice effect on clouds. We find larger cloud fraction and total water content below ~1.5 km over ice-free relative to ice-covered surfaces during non-summer months, indicating a low-level cloud sensitivity to Arctic sea ice decline. During summer, results show larger cloud fraction and water content over ice-free surfaces, however the differences are statistically indistinguishable. Evidence is provided that atmospheric thermodynamic profile differences cause the cloud property differences, namely that ice-free footprints are warmer, moister, have more positive surface turbulent fluxes and are less stable than their ice-covered counterparts. Ice-free and ice-covered surface cloud property differences scale with surface temperature differences such that cloud property differences are only found in the presence of a surface temperature difference. We conclude that surface temperature differences modulate the cloud response to sea ice loss through influences on surface turbulent fluxes and lower tropospheric stability. The results imply a positive non-summer sea ice-cloud feedback and that up to a 0.02 cloud fraction and 0.05 g m 3 total water content increase in fall are due to the observed sea ice decline.
Document ID
20220017540
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Patrick C Taylor
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Emily Monroe
(Science Systems and Applications (United States) Lanham, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
November 21, 2022
Subject Category
Meteorology and Climatology
Meeting Information
Meeting: American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
Location: Chicago, IL
Country: US
Start Date: December 12, 2022
End Date: December 16, 2022
Sponsors: American Geophysical Union
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 509496.02.08.12.50
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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