Antarctic Sea Ice Variability, Change and Linkages with the Atmospheric Circulation

Speaker: Marilyn Raphael,
Institution: UCLA
Location: MS 7124
Date: January 25, 2023
Time: 3:30 pm to 4:30 pm


Abstract:

Antarctic Sea ice is a critically important component of our Climate system. It is at once habitat for penguins, a moderator of the  largescale atmospheric circulation and an influence on the global thermohaline circulation. While similar in many respects to Arctic sea ice, there are distinct differences. Antarctic sea ice variability is strongly regional – five distinct regions of variability have been defined. While exhibiting similar annual cycles, these regions vary in their times of advance and retreat as well as in overall sea ice extent. They also have different spectral signatures with interannual frequencies of varying strengths. Antarctic sea ice trends are also  strongly regional with positive trends occurring, for example, in the Ross Sea and negative trends in the Bellingshausen-Amundsen Seas. Some of the intrinsic spatial variability in the sea ice is probably due to the effect of the geography of Antarctica and the influence of the ocean. Some is due to the influence of the largescale atmospheric circulation – the Southern Hemisphere Annular Mode, Zonal Wave Three and the Amundsen Sea Low. In this presentation I discuss how these components of the atmospheric circulation exert their influence on different regions of sea ice and how the sea ice might be expected to change as the atmospheric circulation changes. I also discuss the recent extremes in Antarctic sea ice.