Fluctuations and seasonality in the Arctic sea ice area: A sudden regime shift in 2007?
Peter D. Ditlevsen, Ivana Cvijanovic

TL;DR
This study develops a statistical model to analyze Arctic sea ice fluctuations, revealing a short three-week persistence time dominated by atmospheric forcing and identifying a potential permanent shift in sea ice amplitude post-2007.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel statistical approach to decompose sea ice changes, uncovering short-term fluctuation persistence and a significant amplitude shift in 2007.
Findings
Fluctuation persistence time is about three weeks.
Seasonal cycle shape remains constant despite ice decline.
2007 experienced a permanent increase in sea ice amplitude.
Abstract
Since the beginning of satellite observations, the Arctic sea ice extent has shown a downward trend. The decline has been weaker in the March maximum than in the September minimum and masked by inter-annual fluctuations. One of the less understood aspects of the sea ice response is the persistence times for fluctuations, which could indicate the dominant physical processes behind the sea ice decline. To determine the fluctuation persistence times, however, it is necessary to first filter out the dominant effect of the seasonal cycle. In the current study, we thus develop a statistical model, which accurately decomposes the ice area changes into: (1) a variable seasonal cycle component with a constant shape and (2) a residual (short term) fluctuation. We find the persistence time of fluctuations to be only about three weeks, independently from season, which is substantially shorter…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Climate change and permafrost · Climate variability and models
