scholarly journals Seasonal Arctic sea ice forecasting with probabilistic deep learning

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom R. Andersson ◽  
J. Scott Hosking ◽  
María Pérez-Ortiz ◽  
Brooks Paige ◽  
Andrew Elliott ◽  
...  

AbstractAnthropogenic warming has led to an unprecedented year-round reduction in Arctic sea ice extent. This has far-reaching consequences for indigenous and local communities, polar ecosystems, and global climate, motivating the need for accurate seasonal sea ice forecasts. While physics-based dynamical models can successfully forecast sea ice concentration several weeks ahead, they struggle to outperform simple statistical benchmarks at longer lead times. We present a probabilistic, deep learning sea ice forecasting system, IceNet. The system has been trained on climate simulations and observational data to forecast the next 6 months of monthly-averaged sea ice concentration maps. We show that IceNet advances the range of accurate sea ice forecasts, outperforming a state-of-the-art dynamical model in seasonal forecasts of summer sea ice, particularly for extreme sea ice events. This step-change in sea ice forecasting ability brings us closer to conservation tools that mitigate risks associated with rapid sea ice loss.

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (7) ◽  
pp. 3207-3227
Author(s):  
Timothy Williams ◽  
Anton Korosov ◽  
Pierre Rampal ◽  
Einar Ólason

Abstract. The neXtSIM-F (neXtSIM forecast) forecasting system consists of a stand-alone sea ice model, neXtSIM (neXt-generation Sea Ice Model), forced by the TOPAZ ocean forecast and the ECMWF atmospheric forecast, combined with daily data assimilation of sea ice concentration. It uses the novel brittle Bingham–Maxwell (BBM) sea ice rheology, making it the first forecast based on a continuum model not to use the viscous–plastic (VP) rheology. It was tested in the Arctic for the time period November 2018–June 2020 and was found to perform well, although there are some shortcomings. Despite drift not being assimilated in our system, the sea ice drift is good throughout the year, being relatively unbiased, even for longer lead times like 5 d. The RMSE in speed and the total RMSE are also good for the first 3 or so days, although they both increase steadily with lead time. The thickness distribution is relatively good, although there are some regions that experience excessive thickening with negative implications for the summertime sea ice extent, particularly in the Greenland Sea. The neXtSIM-F forecasting system assimilates OSI SAF sea ice concentration products (both SSMIS and AMSR2) by modifying the initial conditions daily and adding a compensating heat flux to prevent removed ice growing back too quickly. The assimilation greatly improves the sea ice extent for the forecast duration.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Andersson ◽  
Fruzsina Agocs ◽  
Scott Hosking ◽  
María Pérez-Ortiz ◽  
Brooks Paige ◽  
...  

<p>Over recent decades, the Arctic has warmed faster than any region on Earth. The rapid decline in Arctic sea ice extent (SIE) is often highlighted as a key indicator of anthropogenic climate change. Changes in sea ice disrupt Arctic wildlife and indigenous communities, and influence weather patterns as far as the mid-latitudes. Furthermore, melting sea ice attenuates the albedo effect by replacing the white, reflective ice with dark, heat-absorbing melt ponds and open sea, increasing the Sun’s radiative heat input to the Arctic and amplifying global warming through a positive feedback loop. Thus, the reliable prediction of sea ice under a changing climate is of both regional and global importance. However, Arctic sea ice presents severe modelling challenges due to its complex coupled interactions with the ocean and atmosphere, leading to high levels of uncertainty in numerical sea ice forecasts.</p><p>Deep learning (a subset of machine learning) is a family of algorithms that use multiple nonlinear processing layers to extract increasingly high-level features from raw input data. Recent advances in deep learning techniques have enabled widespread success in diverse areas where significant volumes of data are available, such as image recognition, genetics, and online recommendation systems. Despite this success, and the presence of large climate datasets, applications of deep learning in climate science have been scarce until recent years. For example, few studies have posed the prediction of Arctic sea ice in a deep learning framework. We investigate the potential of a fully data-driven, neural network sea ice prediction system based on satellite observations of the Arctic. In particular, we use inputs of monthly-averaged sea ice concentration (SIC) maps since 1979 from the National Snow and Ice Data Centre, as well as climatological variables (such as surface pressure and temperature) from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts reanalysis (ERA5) dataset. Past deep learning-based Arctic sea ice prediction systems tend to overestimate sea ice in recent years - we investigate the potential to learn the non-stationarity induced by climate change with the inclusion of multi-decade global warming indicators (such as average Arctic air temperature). We train the networks to predict SIC maps one month into the future, evaluating network prediction uncertainty by ensembling independent networks with different random weight initialisations. Our model accounts for seasonal variations in the drivers of sea ice by controlling for the month of the year being predicted. We benchmark our prediction system against persistence, linear extrapolation and autoregressive models, as well as September minimum SIE predictions from submissions to the Sea Ice Prediction Network's Sea Ice Outlook. Performance is evaluated quantitatively using the root mean square error and qualitatively by analysing maps of prediction error and uncertainty.</p>


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne-Katrine Faber ◽  
Bo Møllesøe Vinther ◽  
Jesper Sjolte ◽  
Rasmus Anker Pedersen

Abstract. This study investigates how variations in Arctic sea ice cover influence δ18O of presentday Arctic precipitation. This is done using the model isoCAM3, an isotope-equipped version of the National Center for Atmospheric Research Community Atmosphere Model version 3. Four sensitivity experiments and one control simulation are performed with prescribed SSTs and sea ice. Each of 5 the four experiments simulates the atmospheric and isotopic response to Arctic oceanic conditions for selected years after the beginning of the satellite era in 1979. Results show that δ18O of precipitation is sensitive to local changes of sea ice concentration. Reduced sea ice extent yields more enriched isotope values while increased sea ice extent yields more depleted isotope values. The configuration of the sea ice cover is essential for the spatial distribution 10 of the simulated changes in δ18O. The experiments of this study show no changes of δ18O for central Greenland. However, this does not exclude that simulations based on other sea ice configurations might yield changes in Greenland δ18O.


2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (21) ◽  
pp. 8429-8446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiqiang Chen ◽  
Jiping Liu ◽  
Mirong Song ◽  
Qinghua Yang ◽  
Shiming Xu

Here sea ice concentration derived from the Special Sensor Microwave Imager/Sounder and thickness derived from the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity and CryoSat-2 satellites are assimilated in the National Centers for Environmental Prediction Climate Forecast System using a localized error subspace transform ensemble Kalman filter (LESTKF). Three ensemble-based hindcasts are conducted to examine impacts of the assimilation on Arctic sea ice prediction, including CTL (without any assimilation), LESTKF-1 (with initial sea ice assimilation only), and LESTKF-E5 (with every 5-day sea ice assimilation). Assessment with the assimilated satellite products and independent sea ice thickness datasets shows that assimilating sea ice concentration and thickness leads to improved Arctic sea ice prediction. LESTKF-1 improves sea ice forecast initially. The initial improvement gradually diminishes after ~3-week integration for sea ice extent but remains quite steady through the integration for sea ice thickness. Large biases in both the ice extent and thickness in CTL are remarkably reduced through the hindcast in LESTKF-E5. Additional numerical experiments suggest that the hindcast with sea ice thickness assimilation dramatically reduces systematic bias in the predicted ice thickness compared with sea ice concentration assimilation only or without any assimilation, which also benefits the prediction of sea ice extent and concentration due to their covariability. Hence, the corrected state of sea ice thickness would aid in the forecast procedure. Increasing the number of ensemble members or extending the integration period to generate estimates of initial model states and uncertainties seems to have small impacts on sea ice prediction relative to LESTKF-E5.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 807
Author(s):  
Jessica L. Matthews ◽  
Ge Peng ◽  
Walter N. Meier ◽  
Otis Brown

Arctic sea ice extent has been utilized to monitor sea ice changes since the late 1970s using remotely sensed sea ice data derived from passive microwave (PM) sensors. A 15% sea ice concentration threshold value has been used traditionally when computing sea ice extent (SIE), although other threshold values have been employed. Does the rapid depletion of Arctic sea ice potentially alter the basic characteristics of Arctic ice extent? In this paper, we explore whether and how the statistical characteristics of Arctic sea ice have changed during the satellite data record period of 1979–2017 and examine the sensitivity of sea ice extents and their decadal trends to sea ice concentration threshold values. Threshold choice can affect the timing of annual SIE minimums: a threshold choice as low as 30% can change the timing to August instead of September. Threshold choice impacts the value of annual SIE minimums: in particular, changing the threshold from 15% to 35% can change the annual SIE by more than 10% in magnitude. Monthly SIE data distributions are seasonally dependent. Although little impact was seen for threshold choice on data distributions during annual minimum times (August and September), there is a strong impact in May. Threshold choices were not found to impact the choice of optimal statistical models characterizing annual minimum SIE time series. However, the first ice-free Arctic summer year (FIASY) estimates are impacted; higher threshold values produce earlier FIASY estimates and, more notably, FIASY estimates amongst all considered models are more consistent. This analysis suggests that some of the threshold choice impacts to SIE trends may actually be the result of biased data due to surface melt. Given that the rapid Arctic sea ice depletion appears to have statistically changed SIE characteristics, particularly in the summer months, a more extensive investigation to verify surface melt impacts on this data set is warranted.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 1251-1271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arlan Dirkson ◽  
William J. Merryfield ◽  
Adam H. Monahan

Seasonal forecasts of Arctic sea ice using dynamical models are inherently uncertain and so are best communicated in terms of probabilities. Here, we describe novel statistical postprocessing methodologies intended to improve ensemble-based probabilistic forecasts of local sea ice concentration (SIC). The first of these improvements is the application of the parametric zero- and one-inflated beta (BEINF) probability distribution, suitable for doubly bounded variables such as SIC, for obtaining a smoothed forecast probability distribution. The second improvement is the introduction of a novel calibration technique, termed trend-adjusted quantile mapping (TAQM), that explicitly takes into account SIC trends and is applied using the BEINF distribution. We demonstrate these methods using a set of 10-member ensemble SIC hindcasts from the Third Generation Canadian Climate Coupled Global Climate Model (CanCM3) over the period 1981–2017. Though fitting ensemble SIC hindcasts to the BEINF distribution consistently improves probabilistic hindcast skill relative to a simpler “count based” probability approach in perfect model experiments, it does not itself correct model biases that may reduce this improvement when verifying against observations. The TAQM calibration technique is effective at removing SIC biases present in CanCM3 and improving forecast reliability. Over the recent 2000–17 period, TAQM-calibrated SIC hindcasts show improved skill relative to uncalibrated hindcasts. Compared against a climatological reference forecast adjusted for the trend, TAQM-calibrated hindcasts show widespread skill, particularly in September, even at 3–4-month lead times.


Atmosphere ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sha Li ◽  
Muyin Wang ◽  
Nicholas Bond ◽  
Wenyu Huang ◽  
Yong Wang ◽  
...  

Although standard statistical methods and climate models can simulate and predict sea-ice changes well, it is still very hard to distinguish some direct and robust factors associated with sea-ice changes from its internal variability and other noises. Here, with long-term observations (38 years from 1980 to 2017), we apply the causal effect networks algorithm to explore the direct precursors of September Arctic sea-ice extent by adjusting the maximal lead time from one to eight months. For lead time of more than three months, June downward longwave radiation flux in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago is the only one precursor. However, for lead time of 1–3 months, August sea-ice concentration in Western Arctic represents the strongest positive correlation with September sea-ice extent, while August sea-ice concentration factors in other regions have weaker influences on the marginal seas. Other precursors include August wind anomalies in the lower latitudes accompanied with an Arctic high pressure anomaly, which induces the sea-ice loss along the Eurasian coast. These robust precursors can be used to improve the seasonal predictions of Arctic sea ice and evaluate the climate models.


2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 1529-1543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Wang ◽  
Xiaojun Yuan ◽  
Mingfang Ting ◽  
Cuihua Li

Abstract Recent Arctic sea ice changes have important societal and economic impacts and may lead to adverse effects on the Arctic ecosystem, weather, and climate. Understanding the predictability of Arctic sea ice melting is thus an important task. A vector autoregressive (VAR) model is evaluated for predicting the summertime (May–September) daily Arctic sea ice concentration on the intraseasonal time scale, using only the daily sea ice data and without direct information of the atmosphere and ocean. The intraseasonal forecast skill of Arctic sea ice is assessed using the 1979–2012 satellite data. The cross-validated forecast skill of the VAR model is found to be superior to both the anomaly persistence and damped anomaly persistence at lead times of ~20–60 days, especially over northern Eurasian marginal seas and the Beaufort Sea. The daily forecast of ice concentration also leads to predictions of ice-free dates and September mean sea ice extent. In addition to capturing the general seasonal melt of sea ice, the model is also able to capture the interannual variability of the melting, from partial melt of the marginal sea ice in the beginning of the period to almost a complete melt in the later years. While the detailed mechanism leading to the high predictability of intraseasonal sea ice concentration needs to be further examined, the study reveals for the first time that Arctic sea ice can be predicted statistically with reasonable skill at the intraseasonal time scales given the small signal-to-noise ratio of daily data.


Author(s):  
Y. Chen ◽  
X. Zhao ◽  
M. Qu ◽  
Z. Cheng ◽  
X. Pang ◽  
...  

Abstract. Passive microwave (PM) sensors on satellite can monitor sea ice distribution with their strengths of daylight- and weather-independent observations. Microwave Radiation Imager (MWRI) sensor aboard on the Chinese FengYun-3D (FY-3D) satellites was launched in 2017 and provides continuous observation for Arctic sea ice since then. In this study, sea ice concentration (SIC) product is derived from brightness temperature (TB) data of MWRI, based on an Arctic Radiation and Turbulence Interaction Study Sea Ice (ASI) dynamic tie points algorithm. Our product is inter-compared with a published MWRI SIC product by the Enhanced NASA Team (NT2) algorithm, and three Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) SIC products by the ASI, Bootstrap (BST) and NT2 algorithm. Results show that MWRI SIC are generally higher than AMSR2 SIC and the median of monthly SIC differences are larger in summer. Regional analysis indicates that the smaller differences between AMSR2 SIC and MWRI-ASI SIC occur in the higher SIC areas, and the biases are within ±5% in the Beaufort Sea, Chukchi Sea, East Siberian Sea, Canadian Archipelago Sea and Central Arctic Sea. There is the smallest SIC difference in the Central Arctic Sea with the biases of −0.77%, −0.60%, and 0.19% for AMSR2-ASI, AMSR2-BST and AMSR2-NT2, respectively. The trends of MWRI and AMSR2 sea ice extent and sea ice area are consistent with correlation coefficients all greater than 0.997. Besides, mean SIC, sea ice extent and sea ice area of MWRI-ASI are closer to those of AMSR2 than those of MWRI-NT2.


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