Browse Articles

Open access

The Seasonality of Global Land and Ocean Mass and the Changing Water Cycle

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • The seasonal amplitude of global ocean and land water mass describes the seasonal global water cycle and is a metric of its strength

  • The seasonal amplitude varies interannually with magnitude comparable to the long‐term trend in global ocean mass

  • Hydrological changes in specific land regions are most responsible for these year‐to‐year variations

Open access

Northeast Siberian Permafrost Ice‐Wedge Stable Isotopes Depict Pronounced Last Glacial Maximum Winter Cooling

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Pronounced west Beringian MIS 3 to MIS 2 winter cooling delineated in wedge‐ice stable isotope signatures

  • Coldest winters reflected by exceptionally depleted values of −37.4 ± 0.4‰ in δ18O and −292 ± 3‰ in δD in LGM wedge ice

  • LGM wedge ice directly radiocarbon‐dated to 25,890 and 23,980 yr b2k

Five Decades of Observed Daily Precipitation Reveal Longer and More Variable Drought Events Across Much of the Western United States

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Daily station data reveal longer and more variable dry intervals between rainfall during the period 1976–2019 across much of the western US

  • The longest dry interval per year increased in 75% of ecoclimatic domains of the western US

  • In the Desert Southwest and Southwest Rockies/Colorado Plateau, increasing temporal variability of rainfall compounded with reduced rainfall

Open access

Supraglacial River Forcing of Subglacial Water Storage and Diurnal Ice Sheet Motion

  •  5 April 2021

Key Points

  • We measure supraglacial river discharge entering a major moulin simultaneously with local accelerations in ice sheet motion

  • Recorded ice speeds are strongly correlated with diurnal cycles of moulin input over the 168 hour field experiment

  • Differencing supraglacial and proglacial hydrographs suggests diurnal fluctuations in subglacial water storage drive short‐term ice motion

Open access

Impact of Remineralization Profile Shape on the Air‐Sea Carbon Balance

  •  5 April 2021

Key Points

  • Six alternative flux profiles fit to a Martin Curve yield large differences in atmospheric carbon

  • Structural uncertainty comprises one‐third of total uncertainty in the ocean's biological pump

  • Varying particle attenuation with depth may account for half of the biological pump's overall carbon drawdown

Marine Electromagnetic Imaging and Volumetric Estimation of Freshwater Plumes Offshore Hawai'i

  •  31 March 2021

Key Points

  • Surface‐towed marine‐controlled source electromagnetic technique is capable of imaging freshwater plumes in high‐resolution

  • Multiple large‐scale freshwater plumes and surface freshwater bodies were detected offshore the island of Hawai'i

  • Substantial volumes of freshwater occupy seafloor to ocean surface plumes in west Hawai'i

Open access

Persistent Stratospheric Warming Due to 2019–2020 Australian Wildfire Smoke

  •  29 March 2021

Key Points

  • The 2019–2020 Australian wildfire injected about 0.9 Tg smoke containing 2.5% black carbon into the stratosphere

  • Climate model simulations indicate that the smoke warmed the Southern Hemisphere stratosphere by 1 K for more than 6 months

  • Model calculations estimate a decrease in ozone of 10–20 Dobson units from August to December at mid‐high southern latitudes

Open access

Tibetan Plateau Precipitation Modulated by the Periodically Coupled Westerlies and Asian Monsoon

  •  28 March 2021

Key Points

  • Precipitation reconstructed by lacustrine pollen assemblages from the Tibetan Plateau interior reveals three decadal‐centennial oscillations

  • The decadal and centennial cycles are closely related to the Westerlies and the Asian Monsoon, respectively

  • Superimposition of cyclic precipitation highs may have been factors in the current regional wetting trend

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Surface melt and runoff on Antarctic ice shelves at 1.5°C, 2°C and 4°C of future warming

  •  8 April 2021

Key Points

  • More sustained atmospheric warming leads to elevated melt and runoff, which may suggest ice shelf destabilisation

  • 34% of Antarctic ice shelf area could be vulnerable to collapse at 4°C of warming above pre‐industrial levels

  • The Larsen C, Wilkins,Pine Island and Shackleton ice shelves are identified using projected melt and runoff to be most susceptible

Himalayan‐Tibetan Erosion is not the Cause of Neogene Global Cooling

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Sediment deposited by Pearl, Mekong and Indus Rivers has become less altered since the middle Miocene.

  • Total chemical weathering fluxes from these river basins decreased by 50% since 16 Ma.

  • Himalaya‐Tibetan uplift and erosion is not driving global cooling since 16 Ma.

Field‐aligned currents originating from the chaotic motion of electrons in the tilted current sheet: MMS observations

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • A strong current contributed by electrons occurs in the tilted current sheet during the flapping motion.

  • Electrons are non‐adiabatic at the neutral sheet, and their pitch angle distributions undergo scattering.

  • The field‐aligned current is suggested to be generated by the non‐adiabatic electron at the neutral sheet during the flapping motion.

Arctic winter temperature variations correlated with ENSO are dependent on coincidental sea ice changes

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Observed near‐surface air temperature variations over the Barents‐Kara Sea (BKS) are correlated with El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO)

  • Models can reproduce the ENSO‐BKS correlation but only in realizations that have similar or identical sea ice variations as observed

  • Sea ice variations are the proximal cause of ENSO‐correlated BKS temperature changes and may be a manifestation of internal variability

Lightning Initiation from Fast Negative Breakdown is Led by Positive Polarity Dominated Streamers

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Fast breakdown of both polarities appears to begin with an around 1 microsecond burst of positive‐dominated streamer development.

  • Newly identified mixed fast breakdown exhibits simultaneous upward and downward streamer development.

  • We conjecture that many fast breakdown events consist of simultaneous positive and negative streamer development.

Seasonally‐Resolved Holocene Sea Ice Variability Inferred from South Pole Ice Core Chemistry

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Millennial‐scale Holocene variations in sea salt sodium at the South Pole primarily originate from changes in winter sea ice extent.

  • Antarctic Holocene sea salt values have increased, especially from 8,000‐10,000 years ago, reflecting a zonally‐symmetric change in sea ice.

  • We infer reduced Atlantic sector winter sea ice from 5000‐6000 years ago, possibly related to North‐South Atlantic Ocean heat redistribution.

Changes in internal wave‐driven mixing across the Arctic Ocean: Finescale estimates from an 18‐year pan‐Arctic record

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Dissipation in the central Arctic has nearly doubled in summer while declining in winter; no interannual trends are found in any region.

  • Summer heat flux in the central Arctic has risen by an order of magnitude due to stronger and more prevalent internal‐wave driven mixing.

  • The eastern Arctic appears particularly vulnerable to accelerated sea ice‐melt due to the strengthening `ice/internal‐wave' feedback.

Midlatitude continental CAPE is predictable from large‐scale environmental parameters

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • CAPE can be predicted from environmental sounding parameters without lifting a hypothetical air parcel

  • A step‐by‐step derivation demonstrates how CAPE scales with a recently‐proposed CAPE‐like quantity

  • A simple predictive linear equation is presented based on 20 years of reanalysis data over the U.S.

Heat Transfer through the Wairākei‐Tauhara Geothermal System quantified by multi‐channel data modelling

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • Bayesian joint inversion of magnetotelluric and clay content data to infer the clay cap boundary

  • Modeling of inferred clay cap and well temperature data to estimate clay formation temperatures and avoid misinterpretation of conductor nature

  • Modeling of well temperature data to inferred thermal gradients and heat fluxes through the geothermal system

Large‐scale O+ Depletions Observed by ICON in the Post‐Midnight Topside Ionosphere: Data/Model Comparison

  •  6 April 2021

Key Points

  • The IVM instrument on the ICON satellite measured depletions in the O+ density after midnight but not in the H+ density.

  • Simulations using SAMI3/WACCM‐X were able tocapture this behavior.

  • The physical processes for these results are associated with the low O+/H+ transition altitude and a prolonged downward E x B drift.

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free access

Evidence linking Arctic amplification to extreme weather in mid‐latitudes

Key Points

  • Enhanced Arctic warming reduces poleward temperature gradient
  • Weaker gradient affects waves in upper‐level flow in two observable ways
  • Both effects slow weather patterns, favoring extreme weather

Open access

A global inventory of lakes based on high‐resolution satellite imagery

Key Points

  • Earth has 117 million lakes > 0.002 km2
  • Large and intermediate lakes dominate the total surface area of lakes
  • Power law‐based extrapolations do not adequately estimate lake abundance

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Open access

Climate Impacts of COVID‐19 Induced Emission Changes

Key Points

  • COVID‐19 induced lockdowns significantly altered emissions of aerosols, leading to simulated changes in cloud properties in two Earth System Models

  • Aerosol Cloud Interactions from reduced emissions result in significant increases in radiative forcing, up to +0.29 ± 0.15 Wm−2

  • Aerosol radiative forcing reductions are the largest contributor to surface temperature changes

Plain Language Summary

The COVID‐19 pandemic changed emissions of gases and particulates. These gases and particulates affect climate. In general, human emissions of particles cool the planet by scattering away sunlight in the clear sky and by making clouds brighter to reflect sunlight away from the earth. This paper focuses on understanding how changes to emissions of particulates (aerosols) affect climate. We use estimates of emissions changes for 2020 in two climate models to simulate the impacts of the COVID‐19 induced emission changes. We tightly constrain the models by forcing the winds to match observed winds for 2020. COVID‐19 induced lockdowns led to reductions in aerosol and precursor emissions, chiefly soot or black carbon and sulfate (SO4). This is found to reduce the human caused aerosol cooling: creating a small net warming effect on the earth in spring 2020. Changes in cloud properties are smaller than observed changes during 2020. The impact of these changes on regional land surface temperature is small (maximum +0.3 K). The impact of aerosol changes on global surface temperature is very small and lasts over several years. However, the aerosol changes are the largest contribution to COVID‐19 affected emissions induced radiative forcing and temperature changes, larger than ozone, CO2 and contrail effects.

Open access

Causes of Higher Climate Sensitivity in CMIP6 Models

Key Points

  • Climate sensitivity is larger on average in CMIP6 than in CMIP5 due mostly to a stronger positive low cloud feedback
  • This is due to greater reductions in low cloud cover and weaker increases in low cloud water content, primarily in the extratropics
  • These changes are related to model physics differences that are apparent in unforced climate variability

Plain Language Summary

The severity of climate change is closely related to how much the Earth warms in response to greenhouse gas increases. Here we find that the temperature response to an abrupt quadrupling of atmospheric carbon dioxide has increased substantially in the latest generation of global climate models. This is primarily because low cloud water content and coverage decrease more strongly with global warming, causing enhanced planetary absorption of sunlight—an amplifying feedback that ultimately results in more warming. Differences in the physical representation of clouds in models drive this enhanced sensitivity relative to the previous generation of models. It is crucial to establish whether the latest models, which presumably represent the climate system better than their predecessors, are also providing a more realistic picture of future climate warming.

Open access

A high‐accuracy map of global terrain elevations

Key Points

  • A high‐accuracy global digital elevation model (DEM) was developed by removing multiple height error components from existing DEMs
  • Landscape representation was improved, especially in flat regions where height error magnitude was larger than actual topography variation
  • The improved‐terrain DEM is helpful for any geoscience applications which are terrain dependent, such as flood inundation modelling

Plain Language Summary

Terrain elevation maps are fundamental input data for many geoscience studies. While very precise Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) based on airborne measurements are available in developed regions of the world, most areas of the globe rely on spaceborne DEMs which still include non‐negligible height errors for geoscience applications. Here we developed a new high accuracy map of global terrain elevations at 3" resolution (~90m at the equator) by eliminating multiple error components from existing spaceborne DEMs. The height errors included in the original DEMs were separated from actual topography signals and removed using a combination of multiple satellite datasets and filtering techniques. After error removal, global land areas mapped with ±2m or better accuracy increased from 39% to 58%. Significant improvements were found, especially in flat regions such as river floodplains. Here detected height errors were larger than actual topography variability, and following error removal landscapes features such as river networks and hill‐valley structures at last became clearly represented. The developed high accuracy topography map will expand the possibility of geoscience applications that require high accuracy elevation data such as terrain landscape analysis, flood inundation modelling, soil erosion analysis, and wetland carbon cycle studies.

Open access

Arctic Sea Ice in CMIP6

Key Points

  • CMIP6 model simulations of Arctic sea‐ice area capture the observational record in the multimodel ensemble spread
  • The sensitivity of Arctic sea ice to changes in the forcing is better captured by CMIP6 models than by CMIP5 and CMIP3 models
  • The majority of available CMIP6 simulations lose most September sea ice for the first time before 2050 in all scenarios

Plain Language Summary

We examine simulations of Arctic sea ice from the latest generation of global climate models. We find that the observed evolution of Arctic sea‐ice area lies within the spread of model simulations. In particular, the latest generation of models performs better than models from previous generations at simulating the sea‐ice loss for a given amount of CO2 emissions and for a given amount of global warming. In most simulations, the Arctic Ocean becomes practically sea‐ice free (sea‐ice area <1 million km2) in September for the first time before the Year 2050.

Open access

Radiative forcing of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide: A significant revision of the methane radiative forcing

Key Points

  • Calculated CH4 radiative forcing is about 25% higher than earlier estimates
  • New simplified expressions for forcing are presented for CO2, N2O, and CH4
  • Forcing for high CO2 concentrations is 9% higher than previous expressions

Plain Language Summary

“Radiative forcing” is an important method to assess the importance of different climate change mechanisms, and is used, for example, by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Increased concentrations of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, are the major component of the human activity that led the IPCC, in its 2013 Assessment, to conclude that “it is extremely likely that human influence is the dominant cause of warming since the mid‐20th century.” In this letter, we report new and detailed calculations that aimed to update the simpler methods of computing the radiative forcing that have been used in IPCC assessments, and elsewhere. The major result is that radiative forcing due to methane is around 20‐25% higher than that found using the previous simpler methods. The main reason for this is the inclusion of the absorption of solar radiation by methane, a mechanism that had not been included in earlier calculations. We examine the mechanisms by which this solar absorption causes this radiative forcing.The work has significance for assessments of the climate impacts of methane emissions due to human activity, and for the way methane is included in international climate agreements.

Evaluating the Performance of Past Climate Model Projections

Key Points

  • Evaluation of uninitialized multidecadal climate model future projection performance provides a concrete test of model skill
  • The quasi‐linear relationship between model/observed forcings and temperature change is used to control for errors in projected forcing
  • Model simulations published between 1970 and 2007 were skillful in projecting future global mean surface warming

Plain Language Summary

Climate models provide an important way to understand future changes in the Earth's climate. In this paper we undertake a thorough evaluation of the performance of various climate models published between the early 1970s and the late 2000s. Specifically, we look at how well models project global warming in the years after they were published by comparing them to observed temperature changes. Model projections rely on two things to accurately match observations: accurate modeling of climate physics and accurate assumptions around future emissions of CO2 and other factors affecting the climate. The best physics‐based model will still be inaccurate if it is driven by future changes in emissions that differ from reality. To account for this, we look at how the relationship between temperature and atmospheric CO2 (and other climate drivers) differs between models and observations. We find that climate models published over the past five decades were generally quite accurate in predicting global warming in the years after publication, particularly when accounting for differences between modeled and actual changes in atmospheric CO2 and other climate drivers. This research should help resolve public confusion around the performance of past climate modeling efforts and increases our confidence that models are accurately projecting global warming.

Open access

Impact of Coronavirus Outbreak on NO2 Pollution Assessed Using TROPOMI and OMI Observations

Key Points

  • Satellite NO2 data show substantial decreases by 40% on average over Chinese cities due to lockdown measures against the coronavirus outbreak
  • Western Europe and United States display robust NO2 decreases in 2020, 20–38% relative to the same period in 2019
  • Satellite NO2 data above Iran, a region strongly affected by coronavirus, do not show clear evidence of lower emissions

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