logging in or signing up 12 Feb20pm SEARCH worm Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 12 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: November 26, 2007 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript SEARCH Update ARCSS AHW Feb. 20, 2002: Jamie Morison Polar Science Center University of Washington Seattle, Washington USA morison@apl.washington.edu SEARCH Update ARCSS AHW Feb. 20, 2002SEARCH: SEARCH The Arctic is in the midst of a major change involving Atmosphere, Ocean, and Land. Impacts on the ecosystem and society The Arctic change is connected to changes in the atmospheric circulation of the Northern Hemisphere and global climate. Future course is unknown Requires long-term program of observations, analysis, modeling, integration and application to society’s response.A Changing Arctic: Unaami The complex of changes that have dominated the Arctic in the last 2 decades Unaami characterized by among other things: - Drop in Arctic atmospheric pressure - Increased SAT in N. Europe & Russian Arctic - Cyclonic ocean circulation, rising coastal sea level - Increased Atlantic water temperature - Decreased ice cover - Decreased Beaufort Sea salinity From the Yup’ik word meaning tomorrow, synonymous with change for Arctic residents -transportation, food gathering, quality of life The “El Nino of the North” A Changing ArcticSEARCH Strategy: SEARCH Strategy SEARCH and Other Programs: SEARCH and Other ProgramsRecent SEARCH Developments: Recent SEARCH Developments Science Plan published Summer 2001: http://psc.apl.washington.edu/search/ index.html IWG Completes 2003 Funding Implementation Framework and IARPC submits to OMB Sept 2001 SSC & IWG developing bridging Science Implementation Strategy: A) Questions, Priorities, Organization B) Terms of Reference C) Implementation Plan Skeleton Arctic and Sub-arctic Ocean Flux (ASOF) Workshop Atmospheric and Cryospheric Change in the Arctic (ACCA) Workshop First SEARCH AO : Arctic Freshwater Cycle: Land/Upper-Ocean LinkagesSEARCH Tasks&Modes of Variability: SEARCH Tasks & Modes of Variability Outreach activities to educate about SEARCH Refine implementation in areas such as: - Marine Ecosystem - Terrestrial Ecosystem - Arctic Ocean and Sea Ice - Societal Impacts and Application Modes of variability are important to implementation: Learning modes of variability helps our understanding of the system Extreme modal response (Unaami) reveals internal dynamics Key to intelligent sampling decisions Slide8: Ice and Atmospheric Pressure Changes ICE THICKNESS DECREASED 42% in last 30 years (Comparison of submarine data, Rothrock et al, 1999) Transpolar Drift of ice shifted axis counterclockwise producing a more cyclonic motion in 1990s Ice extent decreased 3% per decade Beaufort High decreased and shifted east in 1990s Surface Atmospheric Pressure (contours) and Ice Velocity (arrows) Averaged 1979-87 and 1988-96 Steele & Boyd (1998)Slide9: Connection to Global Climate Low pressure spins up Polar Vortex, brings warm air to Greenland Sea and Russian Arctic Warm air over Greenland Sea allows warmer Atlantic Water in Arctic Ocean Warm air advection increases SAT warms permafrost Increase in Polar Vortex - More cyclonic ocean circulation Shift in front and Transpolar Drift Russian shelf water to Beaufort Increase in Polar Vortex - Weakens Beaufort High Increases open water Decreases Albedo Increases radiative heating & melt Freshens upper Beaufort Sea Cyclonic Circulation - Increases export of fresh water Increases stratification in Greenland and Labrador seas Inhibits global ocean overturning Rising AO means lowers atmospheric pressure over the Arctic. Thompson and Wallace, 1998)Ocean ChangesSalinity Difference, Pargo ‘93 - Climatology: Ocean Changes Salinity Difference, Pargo ‘93 - Climatology Shift in front between Atlantic and Pacific waters Salinity increase in the upper 200 m of the Makarov Surface salinity decrease in Beaufort Sea (SHEBA) From Morison, J. H., K. Aagaard, and M. Steele, 2000, Recent Environmental Changes in the Arctic: A Review, Arctic, 53, 4. Saltier Atlantic-Derived Water Fresher Pacific-Derived Water Frontal Shift Salinity Increase Pargo ‘93 - Climatology Early Indication of Change from ARC- Instigated 1993 SCICEX: Pargo ‘93 - Climatology Early Indication of Change from ARC- Instigated 1993 SCICEX Appearance of warm cores over ridges Increase in Temperature maximum of over 1.5° Atlantic Water Temperature maximum is shallower From Morison, J. H., K. Aagaard, and M. Steele, 2000, Recent Environmental Changes in the Arctic: A Review, Arctic, 53, 4. Atlantic Water 1.5° warmerSlide12: Modes of Variability Caveats Small perturbation in physical mode can create nonlinear change in other parts of the system (e.g., ecosystem): Keep some broad sampling in the mix Regime shifts likely involve the rise and combination of previously less interesting modes Modes of Variability still provide a useful paradigm. You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
12 Feb20pm SEARCH worm Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 12 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: November 26, 2007 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript SEARCH Update ARCSS AHW Feb. 20, 2002: Jamie Morison Polar Science Center University of Washington Seattle, Washington USA morison@apl.washington.edu SEARCH Update ARCSS AHW Feb. 20, 2002SEARCH: SEARCH The Arctic is in the midst of a major change involving Atmosphere, Ocean, and Land. Impacts on the ecosystem and society The Arctic change is connected to changes in the atmospheric circulation of the Northern Hemisphere and global climate. Future course is unknown Requires long-term program of observations, analysis, modeling, integration and application to society’s response.A Changing Arctic: Unaami The complex of changes that have dominated the Arctic in the last 2 decades Unaami characterized by among other things: - Drop in Arctic atmospheric pressure - Increased SAT in N. Europe & Russian Arctic - Cyclonic ocean circulation, rising coastal sea level - Increased Atlantic water temperature - Decreased ice cover - Decreased Beaufort Sea salinity From the Yup’ik word meaning tomorrow, synonymous with change for Arctic residents -transportation, food gathering, quality of life The “El Nino of the North” A Changing ArcticSEARCH Strategy: SEARCH Strategy SEARCH and Other Programs: SEARCH and Other ProgramsRecent SEARCH Developments: Recent SEARCH Developments Science Plan published Summer 2001: http://psc.apl.washington.edu/search/ index.html IWG Completes 2003 Funding Implementation Framework and IARPC submits to OMB Sept 2001 SSC & IWG developing bridging Science Implementation Strategy: A) Questions, Priorities, Organization B) Terms of Reference C) Implementation Plan Skeleton Arctic and Sub-arctic Ocean Flux (ASOF) Workshop Atmospheric and Cryospheric Change in the Arctic (ACCA) Workshop First SEARCH AO : Arctic Freshwater Cycle: Land/Upper-Ocean LinkagesSEARCH Tasks&Modes of Variability: SEARCH Tasks & Modes of Variability Outreach activities to educate about SEARCH Refine implementation in areas such as: - Marine Ecosystem - Terrestrial Ecosystem - Arctic Ocean and Sea Ice - Societal Impacts and Application Modes of variability are important to implementation: Learning modes of variability helps our understanding of the system Extreme modal response (Unaami) reveals internal dynamics Key to intelligent sampling decisions Slide8: Ice and Atmospheric Pressure Changes ICE THICKNESS DECREASED 42% in last 30 years (Comparison of submarine data, Rothrock et al, 1999) Transpolar Drift of ice shifted axis counterclockwise producing a more cyclonic motion in 1990s Ice extent decreased 3% per decade Beaufort High decreased and shifted east in 1990s Surface Atmospheric Pressure (contours) and Ice Velocity (arrows) Averaged 1979-87 and 1988-96 Steele & Boyd (1998)Slide9: Connection to Global Climate Low pressure spins up Polar Vortex, brings warm air to Greenland Sea and Russian Arctic Warm air over Greenland Sea allows warmer Atlantic Water in Arctic Ocean Warm air advection increases SAT warms permafrost Increase in Polar Vortex - More cyclonic ocean circulation Shift in front and Transpolar Drift Russian shelf water to Beaufort Increase in Polar Vortex - Weakens Beaufort High Increases open water Decreases Albedo Increases radiative heating & melt Freshens upper Beaufort Sea Cyclonic Circulation - Increases export of fresh water Increases stratification in Greenland and Labrador seas Inhibits global ocean overturning Rising AO means lowers atmospheric pressure over the Arctic. Thompson and Wallace, 1998)Ocean ChangesSalinity Difference, Pargo ‘93 - Climatology: Ocean Changes Salinity Difference, Pargo ‘93 - Climatology Shift in front between Atlantic and Pacific waters Salinity increase in the upper 200 m of the Makarov Surface salinity decrease in Beaufort Sea (SHEBA) From Morison, J. H., K. Aagaard, and M. Steele, 2000, Recent Environmental Changes in the Arctic: A Review, Arctic, 53, 4. Saltier Atlantic-Derived Water Fresher Pacific-Derived Water Frontal Shift Salinity Increase Pargo ‘93 - Climatology Early Indication of Change from ARC- Instigated 1993 SCICEX: Pargo ‘93 - Climatology Early Indication of Change from ARC- Instigated 1993 SCICEX Appearance of warm cores over ridges Increase in Temperature maximum of over 1.5° Atlantic Water Temperature maximum is shallower From Morison, J. H., K. Aagaard, and M. Steele, 2000, Recent Environmental Changes in the Arctic: A Review, Arctic, 53, 4. Atlantic Water 1.5° warmerSlide12: Modes of Variability Caveats Small perturbation in physical mode can create nonlinear change in other parts of the system (e.g., ecosystem): Keep some broad sampling in the mix Regime shifts likely involve the rise and combination of previously less interesting modes Modes of Variability still provide a useful paradigm.