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Arctic Amplification Response to Individual Climate Drivers.

Authors :
Stjern, Camilla Weum
Lund, Marianne Tronstad
Samset, Bjørn Hallvard
Myhre, Gunnar
Sand, Maria
Kharin, Viatcheslav
Lamarque, Jean‐François
Shindell, Drew
Takemura, Toshihiko
Forster, Piers M.
Richardson, Thomas
Smith, Christopher J.
Andrews, Timothy
Boucher, Olivier
Faluvegi, Gregory
Fläschner, Dagmar
Iversen, Trond
Kirkevåg, Alf
Olivié, Dirk
Kasoar, Matthew
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Atmospheres; 7/16/2019, Vol. 124 Issue 13, p6698-6717, 20p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Arctic is experiencing rapid climate change in response to changes in greenhouse gases, aerosols, and other climate drivers. Emission changes in general, as well as geographical shifts in emissions and transport pathways of short‐lived climate forcers, make it necessary to understand the influence of each climate driver on the Arctic. In the Precipitation Driver Response Model Intercomparison Project, 10 global climate models perturbed five different climate drivers separately (CO2, CH4, the solar constant, black carbon, and SO4). We show that the annual mean Arctic amplification (defined as the ratio between Arctic and the global mean temperature change) at the surface is similar between climate drivers, ranging from 1.9 (± an intermodel standard deviation of 0.4) for the solar to 2.3 (±0.6) for the SO4 perturbations, with minimum amplification in the summer for all drivers. The vertical and seasonal temperature response patterns indicate that the Arctic is warmed through similar mechanisms for all climate drivers except black carbon. For all drivers, the precipitation change per degree global temperature change is positive in the Arctic, with a seasonality following that of the Arctic amplification. We find indications that SO4 perturbations produce a slightly stronger precipitation response than the other drivers, particularly compared to CO2. Key Points: Arctic amplification of surface warming is similar between global drivers of climate changeBlack carbon induces differing vertical and seasonal amplification patternsSulfate affects Arctic precipitation responses more strongly than other drivers, particularly in the summer season [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2169897X
Volume :
124
Issue :
13
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Atmospheres
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137720665
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JD029726