- 著者
-
Mottram Ruth
Boberg Fredrik
Langen Peter
Yang Shuting
Rodehacke Christian
Christensen Jens Hesselbjerg
Madsen Marianne Sloth
- 出版者
- 低温科学第75巻編集委員会
- 雑誌
- 低温科学
- 巻号頁・発行日
- pp.105-115, 2017-03-31
Surface mass balance (SMB) is the builder of the Greenland ice sheet and the driver of ice
dynamics. Quantifying the past, present and future state of SMB is important to understand the
drivers and climatic processes that control SMB, and to both initialize and run ice sheet models which
will help clarify sea level rise, and how likely changes in ice sheet extent feedback within the climate
system.
Regional climate models (RCMs) and climate reanalysis are used to quantify SMB estimates.
Although different models have different spatial and temporal biases and may include different
processes giving significant uncertainty in both SMB and the ice sheet dynamic response to it, all
RCMs show a recent declining trend in SMB from the Greenland ice sheet, driven primarily by
enhanced melt rates. Here, we present new simulations of the Greenland ice sheet SMB at 5 km
resolution from the RCM HIRHAM5. The RCM is driven by the ERA-Interim reanalysis and the
global climate model (GCM) EC-Earth v2.3 to make future projections for climate scenarios RCP8.5
and RCP4.5.
Future estimates of SMB are affected by biases in driving global climate models, and feedbacks
between the ice sheet surface and the global and regional climate system are neglected, likely resulting
in significant underestimates of melt and precipitation over the ice sheet. These challenges will need
to be met to better estimate the role climate change will have in modulating the surface mass balance
of the Greenland ice sheet.