Edge States in the Climate System: Exploring Global Instabilities and Critical Transitions
Valerio Lucarini, Tamas Bodai

TL;DR
This paper investigates the multistability of Earth's climate, focusing on the critical transitions between warm and snowball states, by identifying and analyzing the properties of edge states and their bifurcations in a simplified climate model.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of climatic edge states (Melancholia states) in a simplified Earth-like model, revealing their complex dynamics and role in climate transitions.
Findings
Identification of chaotic Melancholia states with complex bifurcations
Discovery of a new stable climate state with unique symmetry properties
Relation of basin boundary complexity to weather and climate scale separation
Abstract
Multistability is a ubiquitous feature in systems of geophysical relevance and provides key challenges for our ability to predict a system's response to perturbations. Near critical transitions small causes can lead to large effects and - for all practical purposes - irreversible changes in the properties of the system. The Earth climate is multistable: present astronomical and astrophysical conditions support two stable regimes, the warm climate we live in, and a snowball climate, characterized by global glaciation. We first provide an overview of methods and ideas relevant for studying the climate response to forcings and focus on the properties of critical transitions. Following an idea developed by Eckhardt and co. for the investigation of multistable turbulent flows, we study the global instability giving rise to the snowball/warm multistability in the climate system by identifying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcosystem dynamics and resilience · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation
