![]() |
CryoSat Polar climate
The effects of a warming climate are expected to be felt more strongly at the poles, and particularly in the Arctic. However, current global ocean-ice-atmosphere models are not yet able to accurately reproduce observed sea-ice coverage. Arbitrary flux corrections in these models, which essentially hold the sea surface temperature at freezing in regions where there is sea ice, make the calculation of the effect of 'perturbations' such as CO2 –induced warming questionable (Gates et al, 1996). The physics of sea ice in global climate models is, at the moment, oversimplified. With the recognition that variations in thermohaline circulation may have important consequences for poleward-bound heat transport – the next years will see more complete sea-ice physics within global ocean-atmosphere models. These developments demand more information on sea-ice extent and volume changes – which will be provided by the CryoSat-2 mission. Last update: 22 January 2010
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||