GC31A:
Advancing Science of the Arctic System: Exploring the Past and Present to Predict the Future I Posters
GC31A:
Advancing Science of the Arctic System: Exploring the Past and Present to Predict the Future I Posters
Advancing Science of the Arctic System: Exploring the Past and Present to Predict the Future I Posters
Session ID#: 8314
Session Description:
While some of the largest impacts arising from climate change are expected to occur in the Arctic, there remain many gaps in our understanding and representation of critical processes in models of the Arctic system. The IARPC Science Plan identifies some necessary steps for model improvements that may lead to improved projections of variability in sea ice, snow cover, ocean, atmosphere and land states. An integrated and coordinated effort is required to improve the fidelity of Arctic system models, their capability to project future changes, and to enable informed use of those projections.
We solicit papers that advance understanding of the Arctic system through simulation and comparison of global and regional climate models with observations of the past and present behavior of the Arctic system. We also solicit presentations that identify and evaluate individual parameterizations, model components, and coupled feedbacks that control variability and affect uncertainty in Arctic climate predictions.
Primary Convener: Prof. Wieslaw Maslowski, Ph.D., Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA, United States
Conveners: Scott Harper, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, VA, United States, Philip W Jones, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, United States and Renu Joseph, Department of Energy Washington DC, Washington, United States
Chairs: Philip W Jones, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, United States and Prof. Wieslaw Maslowski, Ph.D., Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA, United States
OSPA Liaison: Scott Harper, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, VA, United States
Index Terms:
0750 Sea ice [CRYOSPHERE]
1627 Coupled models of the climate system [GLOBAL CHANGE]
1637 Regional climate change [GLOBAL CHANGE]
4207 Arctic and Antarctic oceanography [OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERAL]
Abstracts Submitted to this Session:
Wind-Driven Freshwater Buildup in the Beaufort Gyre is Inevitably Constrained by Mesoscale Eddies. (86325)
Dynamical Circulation Regimes and Temperature Extremes in the Contemporary and 21st Century Arctic (75289)
See more of: Global Environmental Change