He, S. P., H. Drange, T. Furevik, H. J. Wang, K. Fan, L. S. Graff, and Y. J. Orsolini, 2024: Relative impacts of sea ice loss and atmospheric internal variability on the winter Arctic to East Asian surface air temperature based on large-ensemble simulations with NorESM2. Adv. Atmos. Sci., 41(8), 1511−1526, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-023-3006-9.
Citation: He, S. P., H. Drange, T. Furevik, H. J. Wang, K. Fan, L. S. Graff, and Y. J. Orsolini, 2024: Relative impacts of sea ice loss and atmospheric internal variability on the winter Arctic to East Asian surface air temperature based on large-ensemble simulations with NorESM2. Adv. Atmos. Sci., 41(8), 1511−1526, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-023-3006-9.

Relative Impacts of Sea Ice Loss and Atmospheric Internal Variability on the Winter Arctic to East Asian Surface Air Temperature Based on Large-Ensemble Simulations with NorESM2

  • To quantify the relative contributions of Arctic sea ice and unforced atmospheric internal variability to the “warm Arctic, cold East Asia” (WACE) teleconnection, this study analyses three sets of large-ensemble simulations carried out by the Norwegian Earth System Model with a coupled atmosphere–land surface model, forced by seasonal sea ice conditions from preindustrial, present-day, and future periods. Each ensemble member within the same set uses the same forcing but with small perturbations to the atmospheric initial state. Hence, the difference between the present-day (or future) ensemble mean and the preindustrial ensemble mean provides the ice-loss-induced response, while the difference of the individual members within the present-day (or future) set is the effect of atmospheric internal variability. Results indicate that both present-day and future sea ice loss can force a negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation with a WACE pattern in winter. The magnitude of ice-induced Arctic warming is over four (ten) times larger than the ice-induced East Asian cooling in the present-day (future) experiment; the latter having a magnitude that is about 30% of the observed cooling. Sea ice loss contributes about 60% (80%) to the Arctic winter warming in the present-day (future) experiment. Atmospheric internal variability can also induce a WACE pattern with comparable magnitudes between the Arctic and East Asia. Ice-loss-induced East Asian cooling can easily be masked by atmospheric internal variability effects because random atmospheric internal variability may induce a larger magnitude warming. The observed WACE pattern occurs as a result of both Arctic sea ice loss and atmospheric internal variability, with the former dominating Arctic warming and the latter dominating East Asian cooling.
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