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Parametric Study of Prompt Methane Release Impacts III: AOGCM Results Which Respect Historical PIOMAS Measurements
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Of immediate widespread concern is the accelerating transition from
Holocene-like weather patterns to unknown, and likely unstable,
Anthropocene patterns. A fell example is irreversible Arctic phase
change. It is not clear if existing AOGCMs are adequate to model
anticipated global impacts in detail; however, the GISS ModelE AOGCM can
be used to locally compare and extend the PIOMAS Arctic ocean historical
ice-volume dataset into the near future. Arctic Amplification (AA)
mechanisms are poorly understood; to enable timely results, a simple
linear, Arctic TOA grid-boundary energy-input is used to enforce AA,
avoiding the perils of arbitrary modification of relatively well-studied
parameterizations (e.g., restriction of cloud-top height to induce local
warming). Only PIOMAS springtime/max and fall/min Arctic ice-volume
decadal, linear trends were enforced. This temporally-broad
grid-boundary modification produces a surprisingly detailed consonance
with monthly trends in the historical PIOMAS dataset from 2003 to 2021,
and is integrated to 2050. The result is a zero-ice-volume, summer/fall
half-year, beginning ca. 2035 (onset 1-sigma of ± ~5
years), with mean annual Arctic temperatures increasingly trending above
freezing. Persistent, Arctic phase change follows this half-year
transition about 20 years later. Also present in later stages, the 500
hPa height minimum is no longer nearly-coincident with the pole,
suggesting jet stream disruption and its consequences. Hypothesized
large clathrate-methane releases likely associated with Arctic
temperature and phase change are also examined. This work establishes a
reasonably detailed timeline for the Arctic phase change based on
well-studied AOGCM physics, slightly tuned to decades of PIOMAS data.
This result also points to the Arctic as a key, near-term site for
localized, nondestructive intervention to mitigate Arctic phase change
(e.g., Stjern [2018]), thereby slowing the Holocene ->
Anthropocene growing-season disruption. Although such an intervention
cannot itself accomplish the requirements of the IPCC SP-15 [2018],
nor Planetary Boundaries theory, delaying the Arctic phase change will
likely extend the time-window for accomplishing those critical tasks and
ultimately to at least slow the rate of increase of climate emergencies.
Title: Parametric Study of Prompt Methane Release Impacts III: AOGCM Results Which Respect Historical PIOMAS Measurements
Description:
Of immediate widespread concern is the accelerating transition from
Holocene-like weather patterns to unknown, and likely unstable,
Anthropocene patterns.
A fell example is irreversible Arctic phase
change.
It is not clear if existing AOGCMs are adequate to model
anticipated global impacts in detail; however, the GISS ModelE AOGCM can
be used to locally compare and extend the PIOMAS Arctic ocean historical
ice-volume dataset into the near future.
Arctic Amplification (AA)
mechanisms are poorly understood; to enable timely results, a simple
linear, Arctic TOA grid-boundary energy-input is used to enforce AA,
avoiding the perils of arbitrary modification of relatively well-studied
parameterizations (e.
g.
, restriction of cloud-top height to induce local
warming).
Only PIOMAS springtime/max and fall/min Arctic ice-volume
decadal, linear trends were enforced.
This temporally-broad
grid-boundary modification produces a surprisingly detailed consonance
with monthly trends in the historical PIOMAS dataset from 2003 to 2021,
and is integrated to 2050.
The result is a zero-ice-volume, summer/fall
half-year, beginning ca.
2035 (onset 1-sigma of ± ~5
years), with mean annual Arctic temperatures increasingly trending above
freezing.
Persistent, Arctic phase change follows this half-year
transition about 20 years later.
Also present in later stages, the 500
hPa height minimum is no longer nearly-coincident with the pole,
suggesting jet stream disruption and its consequences.
Hypothesized
large clathrate-methane releases likely associated with Arctic
temperature and phase change are also examined.
This work establishes a
reasonably detailed timeline for the Arctic phase change based on
well-studied AOGCM physics, slightly tuned to decades of PIOMAS data.
This result also points to the Arctic as a key, near-term site for
localized, nondestructive intervention to mitigate Arctic phase change
(e.
g.
, Stjern [2018]), thereby slowing the Holocene ->
Anthropocene growing-season disruption.
Although such an intervention
cannot itself accomplish the requirements of the IPCC SP-15 [2018],
nor Planetary Boundaries theory, delaying the Arctic phase change will
likely extend the time-window for accomplishing those critical tasks and
ultimately to at least slow the rate of increase of climate emergencies.
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