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Accelerated Greenland Ice Sheet Mass Loss under High Greenhouse Gas Forcing as Simulated by the Coupled CESM2.1-CISM2.1
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  • Laura Muntjewerf,
  • Raymond Sellevold,
  • Miren Vizcaino,
  • Carolina Ernani da Silva,
  • Michele Petrini,
  • Katherine Thayer-Calder,
  • Meike D. W. Scherrenberg,
  • Sarah L Bradley,
  • Jeremy Garmeson Fyke,
  • William H. Lipscomb,
  • Marcus Löfverström,
  • Bill Sacks
Laura Muntjewerf
Delft University of Technology

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Raymond Sellevold
Delft University of Technology
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Miren Vizcaino
Delft University of Technology
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Carolina Ernani da Silva
Delft University of Technology
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Michele Petrini
Delft University of Technology
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Katherine Thayer-Calder
National Center for Atmospheric Research (UCAR)
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Meike D. W. Scherrenberg
Delft University of Technology
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Sarah L Bradley
University of Sheffield
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Jeremy Garmeson Fyke
Associated Engineering
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William H. Lipscomb
National Center for Atmospheric Research
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Marcus Löfverström
University of Arizona
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Bill Sacks
National Center for Atmospheric Research (UCAR)
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Abstract

The Greenland ice sheet (GrIS) has been losing mass in the last several decades, and is currently contributing around 0.7 mm sea level equivalent (SLE) yr-1 to global mean sea level rise (SLR). As ice sheets are integral parts of the Earth system, it is important to gain process-level understanding of GrIS mass loss.
This paper presents an idealized high-forcing simulation of 350 years with the Community Earth System Model version 2.1 (CESM2.1) including interactively coupled, dynamic GrIS with the Community Ice Sheet Model v2.1 (CISM2.1). From pre-industrial levels (287 ppmv), the CO2 concentration is increased by 1% yr-1 till quadrupling (1140 ppmv) is reached in year 140. After this, the forcing is kept constant.
Global mean temperature anomaly of 5.2 K and 8.5 K is simulated by years 131–150 and 331-150, respectively. The North Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation strongly declines, starting before GrIS runoff substantially increases. The projected GrIS contribution to global mean SLR is 107 mm SLE by year 150, and 1140 mm SLE by year 350.
The accelerated mass loss is driven by the SMB. Increased long-wave radiation from the warmer atmosphere induces an initial slow SMB decline. An acceleration in SMB decline occurs after the ablation areas have expanded enough to trigger the ice-albedo feedback. Thereafter, short-wave radiation becomes an increasingly important contributor to the melt energy. The turbulent heat fluxes further enhance melt and the refreezing capacity becomes saturated. The global mean temperature anomaly at the start of the accelerated SMB decline is 4.2 K.
Oct 2020Published in Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems volume 12 issue 10. 10.1029/2019MS002031