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      Strong Summer Atmospheric Rivers Trigger Greenland Ice Sheet Melt through Spatially Varying Surface Energy Balance and Cloud Regimes

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          ABSTRACT

          Mass loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) has accelerated over the past two decades, coincident with rapid Arctic warming and increasing moisture transport over Greenland by atmospheric rivers (ARs). Summer ARs affecting western Greenland trigger GrIS melt events, but the physical mechanisms through which ARs induce melt are not well understood. This study elucidates the coupled surface–atmosphere processes by which ARs force GrIS melt through analysis of the surface energy balance (SEB), cloud properties, and local- to synoptic-scale atmospheric conditions during strong summer AR events affecting western Greenland. ARs are identified in MERRA-2 reanalysis (1980–2017) and classified by integrated water vapor transport (IVT) intensity. SEB, cloud, and atmospheric data from regional climate model, observational, reanalysis, and satellite-based datasets are used to analyze melt-inducing physical processes during strong, >90th percentile “AR90+” events. Near AR “landfall,” AR90+ days feature increased cloud cover that reduces net shortwave radiation and increases net longwave radiation. As these oppositely signed radiative anomalies partly cancel during AR90+ events, increased melt energy in the ablation zone is primarily provided by turbulent heat fluxes, particularly sensible heat flux. These turbulent heat fluxes are driven by enhanced barrier winds generated by a stronger synoptic pressure gradient combined with an enhanced local temperature contrast between cool over-ice air and the anomalously warm surrounding atmosphere. During AR90+ events in northwest Greenland, anomalous melt is forced remotely through a clear-sky foehn regime produced by downslope flow in eastern Greenland.

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          The extreme melt across the Greenland ice sheet in 2012

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            July 2012 Greenland melt extent enhanced by low-level liquid clouds.

            Melting of the world's major ice sheets can affect human and environmental conditions by contributing to sea-level rise. In July 2012, an historically rare period of extended surface melting was observed across almost the entire Greenland ice sheet, raising questions about the frequency and spatial extent of such events. Here we show that low-level clouds consisting of liquid water droplets ('liquid clouds'), via their radiative effects, played a key part in this melt event by increasing near-surface temperatures. We used a suite of surface-based observations, remote sensing data, and a surface energy-balance model. At the critical surface melt time, the clouds were optically thick enough and low enough to enhance the downwelling infrared flux at the surface. At the same time they were optically thin enough to allow sufficient solar radiation to penetrate through them and raise surface temperatures above the melting point. Outside this narrow range in cloud optical thickness, the radiative contribution to the surface energy budget would have been diminished, and the spatial extent of this melting event would have been smaller. We further show that these thin, low-level liquid clouds occur frequently, both over Greenland and across the Arctic, being present around 30-50 per cent of the time. Our results may help to explain the difficulties that global climate models have in simulating the Arctic surface energy budget, particularly as models tend to under-predict the formation of optically thin liquid clouds at supercooled temperatures--a process potentially necessary to account fully for temperature feedbacks in a warming Arctic climate.
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              Greenland ice sheet albedo feedback: thermodynamics and atmospheric drivers

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Climate
                American Meteorological Society
                0894-8755
                1520-0442
                August 15 2020
                August 15 2020
                July 08 2020
                : 33
                : 16
                : 6809-6832
                Affiliations
                [1 ]a Climatology Research Laboratory, Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia
                [2 ]b Laboratory of Climatology, Department of Geography, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium
                [3 ]c Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, Copenhagen, Denmark
                [4 ]d VITO Remote Sensing, Mol, Belgium
                [5 ]e Department of Geoscience and Remote Sensing, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands
                [6 ]f Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
                Article
                10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0835.1
                6dc804f0-78f1-46b8-8401-0a9e47bbf102
                © 2020
                History

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