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Arctic climate: changes in sea ice extent outweigh changes in snow cover
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2018
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Source: The Cryosphere, 12, 3373–3382, 2018
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Journal Title:The Cryosphere
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NOAA Program & Office:NESDIS (National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service) ; JPSS (Joint Polar Satellite System Program Office) ; NCEI (National Centers for Environmental Information) ; STAR (Center for Satellite Applications and Research) ; CIMSS (Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies)
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Description:Recent declines in Arctic sea ice and snow extent have led to an increase in the absorption of solar energy at the surface, resulting in additional surface heating and a further decline in snow and ice. Using 34 years of satellite data, 1982–2015, we found that the positive trend in solar absorption over the Arctic Ocean is more than double that over Arctic land, and the magnitude of the ice–albedo feedback is four times that of the snow–albedo feedback in summer. The timing of the high-to-low albedo transition has shifted closer to the greater insolation of the summer solstice over ocean, but further away from the summer solstice over land. Therefore, decreasing sea ice cover, not changes in terrestrial snow cover, has been the dominant radiative feedback mechanism over the last few decades.
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Source:The Cryosphere, 12, 3373–3382, 2018
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Rights Information:CC BY
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Compliance:Submitted
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