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Assessment of Arctic and Antarctic Sea Ice Predictability in CMIP5 Decadal HindcastsThis paper examines the ability of coupled global climate models to predict decadal variability of Arctic and Antarctic sea ice. We analyze decadal hindcasts/predictions of 11 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) models. Decadal hindcasts exhibit a large multimodel spread in the simulated sea ice extent, with some models deviating significantly from the observations as the predicted ice extent quickly drifts away from the initial constraint. The anomaly correlation analysis between the decadal hindcast and observed sea ice suggests that in the Arctic, for most models, the areas showing significant predictive skill become broader associated with increasing lead times. This area expansion is largely because nearly all the models are capable of predicting the observed decreasing Arctic sea ice cover. Sea ice extent in the North Pacific has better predictive skill than that in the North Atlantic (particularly at a lead time of 3-7 years), but there is a reemerging predictive skill in the North Atlantic at a lead time of 6-8 years. In contrast to the Arctic, Antarctic sea ice decadal hindcasts do not show broad predictive skill at any timescales, and there is no obvious improvement linking the areal extent of significant predictive skill to lead time increase. This might be because nearly all the models predict a retreating Antarctic sea ice cover, opposite to the observations. For the Arctic, the predictive skill of the multi-model ensemble mean outperforms most models and the persistence prediction at longer timescales, which is not the case for the Antarctic. Overall, for the Arctic, initialized decadal hindcasts show improved predictive skill compared to uninitialized simulations, although this improvement is not present in the Antarctic.
Document ID
20160013301
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
External Source(s)
Authors
Yang, Chao-Yuan
(Albany Univ. Albany, NY, United States)
Liu, Jiping
(Albany Univ. Albany, NY, United States)
Hu, Yongyun
(Peking Univ. Beijing, China)
Horton, Radley M.
(Columbia Univ. New York, NY, United States)
Chen, Liqi
(State Oceanic Administration China)
Cheng, Xiao
(Beijing Normal Univ. China)
Date Acquired
November 8, 2016
Publication Date
October 21, 2016
Publication Information
Publication: The Cryosphere
Publisher: Copernicus Publications
Volume: 10
Issue: 5
e-ISSN: 1994-0424
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN36815
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX14AB99A
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
sea ice
climatology
predictions
hindcasting
Arctic regions
periodic variations
Antarctic regions
climatic models
Arctic Ocean
Atlantic Ocean

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