Arctic's
'Layer Cake' Atmosphere Blamed for Rapid Warming
By
Becky Oskin, Staff Writer
2
February, 2013
The
Arctic is leading a race with few winners, warming twice as fast as
the rest of the Earth. Loss of snow and ice, which reflect the sun's
energy, is usually blamed for the Arctic temperature spike.
But
a new study suggests the Arctic's
cap of cold, layered air plays a more important role in boosting
polar warming than does its shrinking ice and snow cover. A layer of
shallow, stagnant air acts like a lid, concentrating heat near the
surface, researchers report today (Feb. 2) in the journal Nature
Geoscience. [Images
of Melt: Earth's Vanishing Ice]
"In
the Arctic, as the climate warms, most of the additional heat remains
trapped in a shallow layer of the atmosphere close to the ground, not
deeper than 1 or 2 kilometers [0.6 to 1.2 miles]," said Felix
Pithan, a climate scientist at the Max Planck Institute for
Meteorology in Germany and lead author of the new study.
"[This]
makes the Arctic surface rather inefficient at getting rid of extra
energy, and therefore it warms more than other regions when the
entire planet is warming," Pithan told Live Science.
The
Arctic atmosphere looks like a layer cake compared with the tropics.
In those regions, thunderstorms carry heat from the surface miles
upward, where it then radiates out into space. But in the Arctic, air
and heat at the surface rarely mix with air located high in the
atmosphere, Pithan said.
"The
Arctic atmosphere is much more inefficient than the tropics at
getting rid of that extra energy," he said.
This
pattern also helps explain why the Arctic
warming signal is stronger in winter, Pithan said. During that
season, the Arctic air mixes less than in the summer, because of cold
temperatures and inversion layers — places where air temperature
increases with height, instead of the other way around.
Feedback
loops
Pithan
and co-author Thorsten Mauritsen tested air layering and many other
Arctic climate feedback effects using sophisticated climate computer
models. On a regional scale, climate feedback effects can amplify or
dampen the global warming caused by greenhouse gases.
In
the Arctic, one familiar feedback effect is sea ice albedo, which
measures how well the Earth's surface reflects sunlight. Snow-covered
ice reflects up to 85 percent of sunlight. But the Arctic sea ice has
hit near-record
minimums of sea ice since 2002, meaning the ocean is absorbing
more sunlight, and heat, than it used to, leading to more ice melt.
The
ice-albedo effect was the second most important contributor to Arctic
warming, according to the study.
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