RECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXES

Throughout the late 20th and early 21st century, the global temperature has been on the rise, a process that has been accelerated in the Arctic. The Arctic surface temperatures have risen at a factor of 3 greater rate than the global average, leading to the term Arctic Amplification of climate chang...

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Main Author: Pike-Thackray, Colin
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14167
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-NSHD.ca#10222-141672013-10-04T04:12:51ZRECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXESPike-Thackray, ColinArcticatmospherecloudsradiationsurface energy balancesurface fluxesThroughout the late 20th and early 21st century, the global temperature has been on the rise, a process that has been accelerated in the Arctic. The Arctic surface temperatures have risen at a factor of 3 greater rate than the global average, leading to the term Arctic Amplification of climate change. In this study, the enhanced warming of the Arctic, and the enhancement at the Arctic surface in comparison to the warming of the atmosphere aloft, is investigated through a reconstruction of the past surface energy balance by a model driven by downwelling irradiance reconstructed using radiosonde profiles and the radiative transfer code SBDART. The downwelling irradiance is shown to be increasing over the time-period of 1994-2009, and the sources of this increase are diagnosed. The time-evolution of the surface flux terms are discussed, and the sensitivity of the surface temperature to changes in atmospheric temperature is investigated.2011-09-06T14:00:17Z2011-09-06T14:00:17Z2011-09-062011-08-05http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14167en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Arctic
atmosphere
clouds
radiation
surface energy balance
surface fluxes
spellingShingle Arctic
atmosphere
clouds
radiation
surface energy balance
surface fluxes
Pike-Thackray, Colin
RECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXES
description Throughout the late 20th and early 21st century, the global temperature has been on the rise, a process that has been accelerated in the Arctic. The Arctic surface temperatures have risen at a factor of 3 greater rate than the global average, leading to the term Arctic Amplification of climate change. In this study, the enhanced warming of the Arctic, and the enhancement at the Arctic surface in comparison to the warming of the atmosphere aloft, is investigated through a reconstruction of the past surface energy balance by a model driven by downwelling irradiance reconstructed using radiosonde profiles and the radiative transfer code SBDART. The downwelling irradiance is shown to be increasing over the time-period of 1994-2009, and the sources of this increase are diagnosed. The time-evolution of the surface flux terms are discussed, and the sensitivity of the surface temperature to changes in atmospheric temperature is investigated.
author Pike-Thackray, Colin
author_facet Pike-Thackray, Colin
author_sort Pike-Thackray, Colin
title RECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXES
title_short RECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXES
title_full RECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXES
title_fullStr RECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXES
title_full_unstemmed RECONSTRUCTION OF HIGH ARCTIC WINTER SURFACE ENERGY FLUXES
title_sort reconstruction of high arctic winter surface energy fluxes
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14167
work_keys_str_mv AT pikethackraycolin reconstructionofhigharcticwintersurfaceenergyfluxes
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