A simple conceptual model of abrupt glacial climate events
H. Braun, A. Ganopolski, M. Christl, D. R. Chialvo

TL;DR
This paper presents a simple conceptual model that captures key nonlinear features of abrupt glacial climate events, reproduces their timing, and introduces new resonance mechanisms, aiding statistical analysis of these phenomena.
Contribution
The study develops a minimal conceptual model that reproduces complex glacial climate dynamics and reveals a new form of stochastic resonance and ghost resonance in climate systems.
Findings
The model reproduces the timing and distribution of Dansgaard-Oeschger events.
Identifies a new overshooting stochastic resonance mechanism.
First explicit demonstration of ghost resonance in a geosystem.
Abstract
Here we use a very simple conceptual model in an attempt to reduce essential parts of the complex nonlinearity of abrupt glacial climate changes (the so-called Dansgaard-Oeschger events) to a few simple principles, namely (i) a threshold process, (ii) an overshooting in the stability of the system and (iii) a millennial-scale relaxation. By comparison with a so-called Earth system model of intermediate complexity (CLIMBER-2), in which the events represent oscillations between two climate states corresponding to two fundamentally different modes of deep-water formation in the North Atlantic, we demonstrate that the conceptual model captures fundamental aspects of the nonlinearity of the events in that model. We use the conceptual model in order to reproduce and reanalyse nonlinear resonance mechanisms that were already suggested in order to explain the characteristic time scale of…
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