Coupling between Arctic feedbacks and changes in poleward energy transport
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2011 papers
Abstract
[1] The relationship between poleward energy transport and Arcticamplification isexaminedusingclimate modelsand an energy balance model. In 21st century projections, models with large Arctic amplification have strong surface albedo and longwave cloud feedbacks, but only weak increases (or even decreases) in total energy transport into the Arctic. Enhanced Arctic warming weakens the equator‐to‐pole temperature gradient and decreases atmospheric dry static energy transport, a decrease that often outweighs increases from atmospheric moisture transport and ocean heat transport. Model spread in atmospheric energy transport cannot explain model spread in polar amplification; models with greater polar amplification must instead have stronger local feedbacks. Because local feedbacks affect temperature gradients, coupling between energy transports and Arctic feedbacks cannot be neglected when studying Arctic amplification. Citation: Hwang, Y.‐ T., D. M. W. Frierson, and J. E. Kay (2011), Coupling between Arctic feedbacks and changes in poleward energy transport, Geophys. Res. Lett., 38, L17704, doi:10.1029/2011GL048546.
Related Papers
- Imaging the Arctic(1998)
- → The Distribution of Arctic Plants(1973)1 cited
- → Arctic Land Birds and Their Migrations(1972)
- → Arctic Research. The current status of research and some immediate problems in the North American arctic and sub-arctic. Edited by Diana Rowley. Arctic Institute of North America, 1955. (Special Publication No. 2 of the Arctic Institute of North America. Reprinted from Arctic, Vol. 7, Nos. 3–4, 1954, p. 113–375.) 261 pages, illus., maps. 26 cm. Price $3.50.(1957)
- → Arctic Research. The current status of research and some immediate problems in the North American arctic and sub-arctic. Edited by Diana Rowley. Arctic Institute of North America, 1955. (Special Publication No. 2 of the Arctic Institute of North America. Reprinted from Arctic, Vol. 7, Nos. 3–4, 1954, p. 113–375.) 261 pages, illus., maps. 26 cm. Price $3.50.(1957)