Ice Melt, Sea Level Rise and Superstorms: Evidence from Paleoclimate Data, Climate Modeling, and Modern Observations that 2{\deg}C Global Warming is Dangerous
James Hansen, Makiko Sato, Paul Hearty, Reto Ruedy, Maxwell Kelley,, Valerie Masson-Delmotte, Gary Russell, George Tselioudis, Junji Cao, Eric, Rignot, Isabella Velicogna, Blair Tormey, Bailey Donovan, Evgeniya Kandiano,, Karina von Schuckmann, Pushker Kharecha

TL;DR
This study combines climate simulations, paleoclimate data, and modern observations to demonstrate that rapid ice melt and feedback mechanisms could lead to multi-meter sea level rise within a century, emphasizing the danger of 2°C warming.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the feedback processes involving ice melt, ocean warming, and stratification, highlighting the exponential nature of ice sheet disintegration under current conditions.
Findings
Ice melt feedbacks amplify subsurface ocean warming.
Rapid ice mass loss could cause multi-meter sea level rise in 50-200 years.
Southern Ocean dynamics play a key role in climate and ice sheet stability.
Abstract
We use numerical climate simulations, paleoclimate data, and modern observations to study the effect of growing ice melt from Antarctica and Greenland. Meltwater tends to stabilize the ocean column, inducing amplifying feedbacks that increase subsurface ocean warming and ice shelf melting. Cold meltwater and induced dynamical effects cause ocean surface cooling in the Southern Ocean and North Atlantic, thus increasing Earth's energy imbalance and heat flux into most of the global ocean's surface. Southern Ocean surface cooling, while lower latitudes are warming, increases precipitation on the Southern Ocean, increasing ocean stratification, slowing deepwater formation, and increasing ice sheet mass loss. These feedbacks make ice sheets in contact with the ocean vulnerable to accelerating disintegration. We hypothesize that ice mass loss from the most vulnerable ice, sufficient to raise…
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