Present status and variations in the Arctic energy balance
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The total solar irradiance (TSI, or solar constant) acquired a new value: 1361 W m−2 instead of 1365 W m−2. However a long-term variation of TSI was not detected. The solar irradiance at the earth's surface is considerably smaller (170 W m−2) than previously believed (e.g. 198 W m−2 of IPCC AR4). The previous overestimation is due to the underestimation of the absorption of solar radiation in the atmosphere. The absorption of solar radiation in the atmosphere at about 90 W m−2, or 25–28% of the primary solar radiation from space. The global mean atmospheric downward terrestrial radiation is much larger (345 W m−2) than previously assumed (325 W m−2 of IPCC AR4). The Arctic has regions of negative annual net radiation, a very rare phenomenon on the globe. These regions are the Central Arctic Ocean with its multi-year ice coverage and the accumulation area of the Greenland ice sheet. The energy balance of these regions is presented. Long-wave incoming radiation has been increasing in the Arctic at a rate of 4–5 W m−2/Decade. The Greenland ice sheet exhibits a large vertical difference in net radiation from the ablation area to the dry snow zone in summer. It ranges from 80 W m−2 in the ablation area to 20 W m−2 at the equilibrium line and to 10 W m−2 in the dry snow zone. This gradient determines the melt gradient on the ice sheet, and is mainly caused by the altitude variation in atmospheric long-wave radiation, seconded by the albedo variation. The effect of albedo in summer for various surfaces is discussed. Simulation capabilities of radiation for many GCMs are investigated.
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関連論文
- Summit Greenland environment observatory (report)
- Present status and variations in the Arctic energy balance