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Gandalf The White
09 January 2011 19:13:10



The 'Arctic Amplification' is the first impact we in the Northern Hemisphere is truely feeling.


Originally Posted by: John S2 


The primary driver for the amplified pattern in December was most likely solar. I have explained previously why it is inconceivable that the primary driver was the low sea ice.


The trend in arctic sea ice will remain downwards this coming decade regardless of synoptics, but I suspect the current record breaking levels (ie low for the time of year) are at least partly caused by the amplified pattern.


Originally Posted by: Gray-Wolf 


Hi John


We have been here before, as you say.   The amplified pattern has occurred many times before.  I wonder why this time it is causing record date lows for ice extent?


IMHO it is very easy for all of us to find a plausible explanation for an event but the fact is, as I have said before, whatever the synoptics the trend has been all in one direction for some years now.


As you know there have been papers suggesting that the 'new Arctic' may be at least partly responsible for the early cold spells in the last two winters.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


John S2
09 January 2011 19:19:50


The amplified pattern has occurred many times before.  I wonder why this time it is causing record date lows for ice extent?


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


GTW - just to clarify, I am simply saying that the amplified pattern has probably accelerated the downward trend. The amplified pattern is not responsible for the trend.

Maunder Minimum
09 January 2011 19:44:41



Solar Activity has picked up from the rock bottom minimum levels of the past few years, but by now it should be rocketing up the scale. That it is not, indicates a very weak solar cycle - probably equivalent to SC4 and SC5 during the Dalton Minimum. At current levels of activity, there is little effect - this is a remarkably extended minimum.


 


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


I have been doing a little digging around the Internet to look at past cyles and comparing with the CET values.


The last time we were close to this current depressed level of sunspots was the beginning of the 19th century, when we had a maximum of around 50, followed by two cycles of around 100.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sunspot_Numbers.png


The CET values for the first decades of the 19th century show no evidence of any significant cooling, although the winter of 1814 showed a mean of 0.4C, which is the fourth coldest in the record since 1684.


So, I'm not convinced that even with the lower values in the current cycles, that the CET will show a marked drop - but who knows in the post-modern winter....


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Well, to be precise, extended solar minima seem to be associated with a lot of northern blocking and an amplified jet pattern. Ring any bells? Of course, in a blocked pattern, it is a matter of chance whether you end up on the cold side or the warm side of a blocking pattern. The Maunder Minimum was notable for its severe winters in western Europe, but even during that extended solar minimum, there were some extremely mild winters, when the pattern locked with NW Europe on the mild side of a block.


Climate science is now trying to catch up on this phenomenon (northern blocking during an extended solar minimum) and the indications are that stratospheric warming during an extended minimum causes less of a temperature boundary at the tropopause, leading to a much diminished and meridional jetstream.


That is my take on it. As for global consequences, it is my belief that an amplified jet pattern leads to a general cooling of the northern hemisphere, since the Pole gets warm air from the south, returning cold air by way of displacement. That warm air from the south rapidly radiates out its energy at the Poles, so with the Pole acting as a giant heat exchanger, there is bound to be general cooling, even if the Artic itself is warmer as a consequence (hence less ice build up).


All seems logical to me.


P.S. I am not referring to CET specifically, but to general hemispheric cooling as a consequence of the heat exchange mechanism I referred to above.


New world order coming.
Gray-Wolf
09 January 2011 20:19:44

Seems to me the equator/desert belts do a dandy job of heating the air each day? If the 'warm air were limited then we may have a temp issue of 'milding' further south/ As it is the only 'limited' quantity is deep polar cold which , come March 21st is no longer part of the equation?


I can well appreciate the 'modification' of air masses but when you have 'tweaked' your atmosphere to hold onto more 're-radiated' solar then it's speed of reheat is also enhanced?


If we are changing the Hadley pattern of cells to a single giant 'heat exchange' wave then there will only be 1 winner (with plenty of carbon from the thawing regions to add into our puny efforts ...twice the weight than currently up there?) as atmosphere rapidly alters in composition as the 'enhanced' warming take effect.


The planet 'held out' as long as She could but , as with any such system, when it's time to 'step change' it's time to step change. Such is the speed of a 'step change' that even us short lived beasties will 'see' it occur (look back over the timescales of recent (geologically speaking) 'climate shifts'?).


We have all just seen 10yrs of 'odd' Arctic plunges around the Northern Hemisphere, the past 3 we copped for some, can folk not see a difference with the synoptics of the past couple of PDO phases and the 'kind' of polar outbreaks these brought with them. This past 10 yrs , I see, is different to both the old synoptics and weather types attendant?


Koyaanisqatsi
ko.yaa.nis.katsi (from the Hopi language), n. 1. crazy life. 2. life in turmoil. 3. life disintegrating. 4. life out of balance. 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
VIRESCIT VULNERE VIRTUS
TomC
  • TomC
  • Advanced Member
09 January 2011 20:39:19




Solar Activity has picked up from the rock bottom minimum levels of the past few years, but by now it should be rocketing up the scale. That it is not, indicates a very weak solar cycle - probably equivalent to SC4 and SC5 during the Dalton Minimum. At current levels of activity, there is little effect - this is a remarkably extended minimum.


 


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


I have been doing a little digging around the Internet to look at past cyles and comparing with the CET values.


The last time we were close to this current depressed level of sunspots was the beginning of the 19th century, when we had a maximum of around 50, followed by two cycles of around 100.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sunspot_Numbers.png


The CET values for the first decades of the 19th century show no evidence of any significant cooling, although the winter of 1814 showed a mean of 0.4C, which is the fourth coldest in the record since 1684.


So, I'm not convinced that even with the lower values in the current cycles, that the CET will show a marked drop - but who knows in the post-modern winter....


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Well, to be precise, extended solar minima seem to be associated with a lot of northern blocking and an amplified jet pattern. Ring any bells? Of course, in a blocked pattern, it is a matter of chance whether you end up on the cold side or the warm side of a blocking pattern. The Maunder Minimum was notable for its severe winters in western Europe, but even during that extended solar minimum, there were some extremely mild winters, when the pattern locked with NW Europe on the mild side of a block.


Climate science is now trying to catch up on this phenomenon (northern blocking during an extended solar minimum) and the indications are that stratospheric warming during an extended minimum causes less of a temperature boundary at the tropopause, leading to a much diminished and meridional jetstream.


That is my take on it. As for global consequences, it is my belief that an amplified jet pattern leads to a general cooling of the northern hemisphere, since the Pole gets warm air from the south, returning cold air by way of displacement. That warm air from the south rapidly radiates out its energy at the Poles, so with the Pole acting as a giant heat exchanger, there is bound to be general cooling, even if the Artic itself is warmer as a consequence (hence less ice build up).


All seems logical to me.


P.S. I am not referring to CET specifically, but to general hemispheric cooling as a consequence of the heat exchange mechanism I referred to above.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Long wave cooling to space is proportional to Temperature to the 4 th power, I don't see why moving warm air to the pole causes overall cooling. Can you quantify your argument ?

Maunder Minimum
09 January 2011 21:50:09





Solar Activity has picked up from the rock bottom minimum levels of the past few years, but by now it should be rocketing up the scale. That it is not, indicates a very weak solar cycle - probably equivalent to SC4 and SC5 during the Dalton Minimum. At current levels of activity, there is little effect - this is a remarkably extended minimum.


 


Originally Posted by: TomC 


I have been doing a little digging around the Internet to look at past cyles and comparing with the CET values.


The last time we were close to this current depressed level of sunspots was the beginning of the 19th century, when we had a maximum of around 50, followed by two cycles of around 100.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sunspot_Numbers.png


The CET values for the first decades of the 19th century show no evidence of any significant cooling, although the winter of 1814 showed a mean of 0.4C, which is the fourth coldest in the record since 1684.


So, I'm not convinced that even with the lower values in the current cycles, that the CET will show a marked drop - but who knows in the post-modern winter....


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Well, to be precise, extended solar minima seem to be associated with a lot of northern blocking and an amplified jet pattern. Ring any bells? Of course, in a blocked pattern, it is a matter of chance whether you end up on the cold side or the warm side of a blocking pattern. The Maunder Minimum was notable for its severe winters in western Europe, but even during that extended solar minimum, there were some extremely mild winters, when the pattern locked with NW Europe on the mild side of a block.


Climate science is now trying to catch up on this phenomenon (northern blocking during an extended solar minimum) and the indications are that stratospheric warming during an extended minimum causes less of a temperature boundary at the tropopause, leading to a much diminished and meridional jetstream.


That is my take on it. As for global consequences, it is my belief that an amplified jet pattern leads to a general cooling of the northern hemisphere, since the Pole gets warm air from the south, returning cold air by way of displacement. That warm air from the south rapidly radiates out its energy at the Poles, so with the Pole acting as a giant heat exchanger, there is bound to be general cooling, even if the Artic itself is warmer as a consequence (hence less ice build up).


All seems logical to me.


P.S. I am not referring to CET specifically, but to general hemispheric cooling as a consequence of the heat exchange mechanism I referred to above.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Long wave cooling to space is proportional to Temperature to the 4 th power, I don't see why moving warm air to the pole causes overall cooling. Can you quantify your argument ?


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Moving warm air to the Pole will cool the air rapidly - as well as long wave radiation to space, the air will be rapidly cooled by the very cold ice and water over which it travels. Moving freezing Artic air south in the meantime, is bound to lead to a general cooling.


Warm air does little to warm cold seas, but cold air rapidly extracts warmth from warm seas - that is because of the relative densities of air and water. If the winter Pole is warmer, it stands to reason that somewhere else is colder - since the winter Pole does not experience any incoming solar insolation, it can only be surmised that the mixing of Polar and Temperate air masses will have the effect of cooling the Temperate regions, leading to a general cooling of the hemisphere, certainly outside the tropics.


Finally, as cold air moves south, it leads to increased snow cover and therefore increased albedo - this has to be a verifiable way in which hemispheric cooling can take place - a higher albedo means less absorption of solar radiation.


New world order coming.
TomC
  • TomC
  • Advanced Member
09 January 2011 22:50:07






Solar Activity has picked up from the rock bottom minimum levels of the past few years, but by now it should be rocketing up the scale. That it is not, indicates a very weak solar cycle - probably equivalent to SC4 and SC5 during the Dalton Minimum. At current levels of activity, there is little effect - this is a remarkably extended minimum.


 


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


I have been doing a little digging around the Internet to look at past cyles and comparing with the CET values.


The last time we were close to this current depressed level of sunspots was the beginning of the 19th century, when we had a maximum of around 50, followed by two cycles of around 100.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sunspot_Numbers.png


The CET values for the first decades of the 19th century show no evidence of any significant cooling, although the winter of 1814 showed a mean of 0.4C, which is the fourth coldest in the record since 1684.


So, I'm not convinced that even with the lower values in the current cycles, that the CET will show a marked drop - but who knows in the post-modern winter....


Originally Posted by: TomC 


Well, to be precise, extended solar minima seem to be associated with a lot of northern blocking and an amplified jet pattern. Ring any bells? Of course, in a blocked pattern, it is a matter of chance whether you end up on the cold side or the warm side of a blocking pattern. The Maunder Minimum was notable for its severe winters in western Europe, but even during that extended solar minimum, there were some extremely mild winters, when the pattern locked with NW Europe on the mild side of a block.


Climate science is now trying to catch up on this phenomenon (northern blocking during an extended solar minimum) and the indications are that stratospheric warming during an extended minimum causes less of a temperature boundary at the tropopause, leading to a much diminished and meridional jetstream.


That is my take on it. As for global consequences, it is my belief that an amplified jet pattern leads to a general cooling of the northern hemisphere, since the Pole gets warm air from the south, returning cold air by way of displacement. That warm air from the south rapidly radiates out its energy at the Poles, so with the Pole acting as a giant heat exchanger, there is bound to be general cooling, even if the Artic itself is warmer as a consequence (hence less ice build up).


All seems logical to me.


P.S. I am not referring to CET specifically, but to general hemispheric cooling as a consequence of the heat exchange mechanism I referred to above.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Long wave cooling to space is proportional to Temperature to the 4 th power, I don't see why moving warm air to the pole causes overall cooling. Can you quantify your argument ?


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Moving warm air to the Pole will cool the air rapidly - as well as long wave radiation to space, the air will be rapidly cooled by the very cold ice and water over which it travels. Moving freezing Artic air south in the meantime, is bound to lead to a general cooling.


Warm air does little to warm cold seas, but cold air rapidly extracts warmth from warm seas - that is because of the relative densities of air and water. If the winter Pole is warmer, it stands to reason that somewhere else is colder - since the winter Pole does not experience any incoming solar insolation, it can only be surmised that the mixing of Polar and Temperate air masses will have the effect of cooling the Temperate regions, leading to a general cooling of the hemisphere, certainly outside the tropics.


Finally, as cold air moves south, it leads to increased snow cover and therefore increased albedo - this has to be a verifiable way in which hemispheric cooling can take place - a higher albedo means less absorption of solar radiation.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Well if you systematicaly increase  the area of continental snow cover then I can agree that will increase the  albedo, but is that going to happen ?More meridional flow  will results in cold and warm regions. The cold air moving south will warm over the oceans just as the warm air moving North cools. It is not obvious to me that there will be any hemispherical signal here.


Obviously summer ice and snow is much more important via the albedo effect but that is clearly decreasing in the long term


I don't see how we can get a cumulative year on year hemispherical cooling from this.

John S2
09 January 2011 23:20:15
Tom C - I understand the logic of your argument about areas with snow cover, but I don't think that is what happens in practice. I don't have figures to hand, but I would expect that Northern Hemisphere snow cover would have been greater in much of winter 09/10 plus December 2010 than it was during the exceptionally zonal January 2007. This will affect albedo, which could be quite important if the snow cover were to persist into Spring.
Gray-Wolf
10 January 2011 07:44:23

How were we for N.H. snow last march? How were we by May?


It's the same with the ice last year to.


Albedo don't count over the dark months and if it then melts , in a hurry, come spring where is the neg?


I'd love to think we could rely on increasing snow cover and expanded area with high albedo but the facts tell us a 'warmer world' just melts it before it is able to impact.


Koyaanisqatsi
ko.yaa.nis.katsi (from the Hopi language), n. 1. crazy life. 2. life in turmoil. 3. life disintegrating. 4. life out of balance. 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
VIRESCIT VULNERE VIRTUS
Maunder Minimum
10 January 2011 09:02:11


Well if you systematicaly increase  the area of continental snow cover then I can agree that will increase the  albedo, but is that going to happen ?More meridional flow  will results in cold and warm regions. The cold air moving south will warm over the oceans just as the warm air moving North cools. It is not obvious to me that there will be any hemispherical signal here.


Obviously summer ice and snow is much more important via the albedo effect but that is clearly decreasing in the long term


I don't see how we can get a cumulative year on year hemispherical cooling from this.


Originally Posted by: TomC 


Firstly, for cold air moving south to warm over the oceans means that warmth is being transferred from the oceans the cold air is passing over - that means cooling them.


More meridional flow will result in cold and warm regions - true, but the net effect is to more mixing of the atmosphere with pools of colder air further south than is usual (and also warmer pools further north of course - rapidly cooling in Polar regions).


A series of winters such as this one will undoubtedly reverse decreasing snow cover - expect glaciers to start growing once more - it will take a few years for that effect to become apparent.


If (and it is a big IF), current meridional conditions persist for a few more years, I expect increased albedo resulting from extended snow and ice cover on continental land masses, regardless of AGW. Extended snow cover in both extent and duration of course.


New world order coming.
Gandalf The White
10 January 2011 09:32:36



Well if you systematicaly increase  the area of continental snow cover then I can agree that will increase the  albedo, but is that going to happen ?More meridional flow  will results in cold and warm regions. The cold air moving south will warm over the oceans just as the warm air moving North cools. It is not obvious to me that there will be any hemispherical signal here.


Obviously summer ice and snow is much more important via the albedo effect but that is clearly decreasing in the long term


I don't see how we can get a cumulative year on year hemispherical cooling from this.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Firstly, for cold air moving south to warm over the oceans means that warmth is being transferred from the oceans the cold air is passing over - that means cooling them.


More meridional flow will result in cold and warm regions - true, but the net effect is to more mixing of the atmosphere with pools of colder air further south than is usual (and also warmer pools further north of course - rapidly cooling in Polar regions).


A series of winters such as this one will undoubtedly reverse decreasing snow cover - expect glaciers to start growing once more - it will take a few years for that effect to become apparent.


If (and it is a big IF), current meridional conditions persist for a few more years, I expect increased albedo resulting from extended snow and ice cover on continental land masses, regardless of AGW. Extended snow cover in both extent and duration of course.


Originally Posted by: TomC 


 


This is quite an interesting exchange.


We have discussed the effect of an increased frequency/extent of a meridional jet elsewhere (Stephen was advocating that the effect would be to produce overall cooling).  I think we need to distinguish between the northern and southern hemispheres because my occasional reviews of the global pressure charts suggests that the absence of major land masses in the southern one means significantly less blocking and oscillation of the southern jet.


As regards glaciers, if my understanding of the processes is correct, increased snow cover will have no effect on glacier retreat for hundreds of years.   Any increased snowfall has to flow down the glacier.  If significantly colder conditions were to prevail then the rate of melt might drop below the rate of movement of the glacier and this mechanism would indeed reault in glaciers growing again.  But, just to emphasise, this is not related to snow cover but to temperature.


All this is, of course, conjecture because we don't know the relative strengths of the signals from AGW, the quieter sun and ENSO cycles.   My view is that the amount of warming in the system is such that any cooling will be temporary and regional/local and not global.


 


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Gray-Wolf
10 January 2011 09:35:59

http://img814.imageshack.us/img814/1547/piomasabssep.png


Sept. ice volume amounts. Recovery? Hmmmmm.....


Koyaanisqatsi
ko.yaa.nis.katsi (from the Hopi language), n. 1. crazy life. 2. life in turmoil. 3. life disintegrating. 4. life out of balance. 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
VIRESCIT VULNERE VIRTUS
Maunder Minimum
10 January 2011 09:50:59




Well if you systematicaly increase  the area of continental snow cover then I can agree that will increase the  albedo, but is that going to happen ?More meridional flow  will results in cold and warm regions. The cold air moving south will warm over the oceans just as the warm air moving North cools. It is not obvious to me that there will be any hemispherical signal here.


Obviously summer ice and snow is much more important via the albedo effect but that is clearly decreasing in the long term


I don't see how we can get a cumulative year on year hemispherical cooling from this.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Firstly, for cold air moving south to warm over the oceans means that warmth is being transferred from the oceans the cold air is passing over - that means cooling them.


More meridional flow will result in cold and warm regions - true, but the net effect is to more mixing of the atmosphere with pools of colder air further south than is usual (and also warmer pools further north of course - rapidly cooling in Polar regions).


A series of winters such as this one will undoubtedly reverse decreasing snow cover - expect glaciers to start growing once more - it will take a few years for that effect to become apparent.


If (and it is a big IF), current meridional conditions persist for a few more years, I expect increased albedo resulting from extended snow and ice cover on continental land masses, regardless of AGW. Extended snow cover in both extent and duration of course.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


 


This is quite an interesting exchange.


We have discussed the effect of an increased frequency/extent of a meridional jet elsewhere (Stephen was advocating that the effect would be to produce overall cooling).  I think we need to distinguish between the northern and southern hemispheres because my occasional reviews of the global pressure charts suggests that the absence of major land masses in the southern one means significantly less blocking and oscillation of the southern jet.


As regards glaciers, if my understanding of the processes is correct, increased snow cover will have no effect on glacier retreat for hundreds of years.   Any increased snowfall has to flow down the glacier.  If significantly colder conditions were to prevail then the rate of melt might drop below the rate of movement of the glacier and this mechanism would indeed reault in glaciers growing again.  But, just to emphasise, this is not related to snow cover but to temperature.


All this is, of course, conjecture because we don't know the relative strengths of the signals from AGW, the quieter sun and ENSO cycles.   My view is that the amount of warming in the system is such that any cooling will be temporary and regional/local and not global.


 


Originally Posted by: TomC 


It will be interesting to find out in the coming years. Problem is, we will have to wait a decade at least to see who has the more accurate picture. On the topic of glaciers, there is observational evidence that Alpine glaciers grew during the Maunder Minimum, so I would be surprised if the feedback loop took hundreds of years - I would expect to see consequences in decades instead.


P.S. You are obviously right in differentiating between the Northern and Southern hemispheres - meridional jet patterns simply do not occur around Antartica.


New world order coming.
Gandalf The White
10 January 2011 09:58:13


http://img814.imageshack.us/img814/1547/piomasabssep.png


Sept. ice volume amounts. Recovery? Hmmmmm.....


Originally Posted by: Gray-Wolf 


Quite.


There is no recovery.  The issue is whether there might be a future recovery as a result of the recent move towards cooling phases of ENSO and solar activity.  As you know there are those that are predicting a change in the pattern sometime over the next few years or decades so almost no amount of continuing decline is going to convince everyone - unless, heaven forbid, we see a catastrophic change.


Based on recent numbers we might well have a new record low maximum at the end of the freeze season, which will leave the ice vulnerable to adverse synoptics this summer.


There was a fascinating programme on BBC2 last night about Greenland and how the changes in the climate and ice are affecting the inhabitants.  The locals are convinced that their climate has changed but the short-term impact is genrally favourable economically with the receding ice opening up opportunities for mining and oil extraction.  Against that the hunters are struggling to maintain their way of life.  This really did make me think - climate change is giving them the opportunity for a western way of life but is this necessarily a good thing for them. Most certainly it is not a good thing for their eco-system.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Solar Cycles
10 January 2011 10:09:57




Well if you systematicaly increase  the area of continental snow cover then I can agree that will increase the  albedo, but is that going to happen ?More meridional flow  will results in cold and warm regions. The cold air moving south will warm over the oceans just as the warm air moving North cools. It is not obvious to me that there will be any hemispherical signal here.


Obviously summer ice and snow is much more important via the albedo effect but that is clearly decreasing in the long term


I don't see how we can get a cumulative year on year hemispherical cooling from this.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Firstly, for cold air moving south to warm over the oceans means that warmth is being transferred from the oceans the cold air is passing over - that means cooling them.


More meridional flow will result in cold and warm regions - true, but the net effect is to more mixing of the atmosphere with pools of colder air further south than is usual (and also warmer pools further north of course - rapidly cooling in Polar regions).


A series of winters such as this one will undoubtedly reverse decreasing snow cover - expect glaciers to start growing once more - it will take a few years for that effect to become apparent.


If (and it is a big IF), current meridional conditions persist for a few more years, I expect increased albedo resulting from extended snow and ice cover on continental land masses, regardless of AGW. Extended snow cover in both extent and duration of course.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


 


This is quite an interesting exchange.


We have discussed the effect of an increased frequency/extent of a meridional jet elsewhere (Stephen was advocating that the effect would be to produce overall cooling).  I think we need to distinguish between the northern and southern hemispheres because my occasional reviews of the global pressure charts suggests that the absence of major land masses in the southern one means significantly less blocking and oscillation of the southern jet.


As regards glaciers, if my understanding of the processes is correct, increased snow cover will have no effect on glacier retreat for hundreds of years.   Any increased snowfall has to flow down the glacier.  If significantly colder conditions were to prevail then the rate of melt might drop below the rate of movement of the glacier and this mechanism would indeed reault in glaciers growing again.  But, just to emphasise, this is not related to snow cover but to temperature.


All this is, of course, conjecture because we don't know the relative strengths of the signals from AGW, the quieter sun and ENSO cycles.   My view is that the amount of warming in the system is such that any cooling will be temporary and regional/local and not global.


 


Originally Posted by: TomC 

I'm pretty certain glacier growth can take as little as 20 years, depending on the right conditions?

Gandalf The White
10 January 2011 10:14:52


I'm pretty certain glacier growth can take as little as 20 years, depending on the right conditions?


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 


Hi SC,


That wasn't the point I was making.  I am sure this is correct, as I said above.


 


The key is the relationship between the rate of movement of the glacier down the valley and the rate of melt.  If the rate of melt falls below the rate of movement then the glacier advances and vice versa.  That being the case, all you need in theory is one severe winter followed by a cold summer and potentially the ice would move forward.


My point was that increased snowfall would have no effect because the snow has to compact into ice and flow down the glacier - a process that takes a very long time.  At the margin, increased snowfall would sit on the glacier at lower levels but that is hardly glacial ice and so I would disregard it.


Agreed?


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Gray-Wolf
10 January 2011 10:24:26

I think we'll find the same folk making the same 'mistakes' with glaciers as with sea ice?


 Some 'Alakan glaciers' have grown longer but are a lot 'thinner' i.e. 'extent up , volume down'.....odd that the same folk should not see What's Up With That?


Koyaanisqatsi
ko.yaa.nis.katsi (from the Hopi language), n. 1. crazy life. 2. life in turmoil. 3. life disintegrating. 4. life out of balance. 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
VIRESCIT VULNERE VIRTUS
Solar Cycles
10 January 2011 10:31:50



I'm pretty certain glacier growth can take as little as 20 years, depending on the right conditions?


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Hi SC,


That wasn't the point I was making.  I am sure this is correct, as I said above.


 


The key is the relationship between the rate of movement of the glacier down the valley and the rate of melt.  If the rate of melt falls below the rate of movement then the glacier advances and vice versa.  That being the case, all you need in theory is one severe winter followed by a cold summer and potentially the ice would move forward.


My point was that increased snowfall would have no effect because the snow has to compact into ice and flow down the glacier - a process that takes a very long time.  At the margin, increased snowfall would sit on the glacier at lower levels but that is hardly glacial ice and so I would disregard it.


Agreed?


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 

Aye your right GW, my apologies, I hadn't read all your previous post. 

TomC
  • TomC
  • Advanced Member
10 January 2011 12:56:18


It will be interesting to find out in the coming years. Problem is, we will have to wait a decade at least to see who has the more accurate picture. On the topic of glaciers, there is observational evidence that Alpine glaciers grew during the Maunder Minimum, so I would be surprised if the feedback loop took hundreds of years - I would expect to see consequences in decades instead.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


I don't think that the position of blocks in the Northern Hemisphere is random  when blocking is favoured. The Scandinavian High for example is favoured because of the way in which wave energy interacts with the mountain range there. There are other similar regions where garvity wave mountain interactions favour blocking. So regional cooling in winter may well occur in Western Europe, indeed western parts of the continents will experience winter cooling with any reduction in the strength or frequency of westerly winds. It is still far from obvious that this will lead to hemisphere or global temperature change.


A global model could tell us a lot about this by quantifying thee processes.

polarwind
10 January 2011 13:20:41



It will be interesting to find out in the coming years. Problem is, we will have to wait a decade at least to see who has the more accurate picture. On the topic of glaciers, there is observational evidence that Alpine glaciers grew during the Maunder Minimum, so I would be surprised if the feedback loop took hundreds of years - I would expect to see consequences in decades instead.


Originally Posted by: TomC 


I don't think that the position of blocks in the Northern Hemisphere is random  when blocking is favoured. The Scandinavian High for example is favoured because of the way in which wave energy interacts with the mountain range there. There are other similar regions where garvity wave mountain interactions favour blocking. So regional cooling in winter may well occur in Western Europe, indeed western parts of the continents will experience winter cooling with any reduction in the strength or frequency of westerly winds. It is still far from obvious that this will lead to hemisphere or global temperature change.


A global model could tell us a lot about this by quantifying thee processes.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 

I agree with that, However, it is obvious from historical records that there are different modes of blocking, that tend to persist over different time scales, one mode perhaps more favoured, by a particular nuance in the driving parameters at that time - ENSO etc. So, from that point of view it can be seen as random and until we find the reasons for the differences, essentially it is random.


"The professional standards of science must impose a framework of discipline and at the same time encourage rebellion against it". – Michael Polyani (1962)
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Dave,Derby
Gary L
10 January 2011 14:01:47



I'm pretty certain glacier growth can take as little as 20 years, depending on the right conditions?


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Hi SC,


That wasn't the point I was making.  I am sure this is correct, as I said above.


 


The key is the relationship between the rate of movement of the glacier down the valley and the rate of melt.  If the rate of melt falls below the rate of movement then the glacier advances and vice versa.  That being the case, all you need in theory is one severe winter followed by a cold summer and potentially the ice would move forward.


My point was that increased snowfall would have no effect because the snow has to compact into ice and flow down the glacier - a process that takes a very long time.  At the margin, increased snowfall would sit on the glacier at lower levels but that is hardly glacial ice and so I would disregard it.


Agreed?


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 


The way to look at it is ablation vs accumulation, which determines the mass balance of a glacier. If this is positive over a number of years it's likely the glacier would advance although this isn't always the case. Increased accumulation through precipitation over a number of years that causes a positive mass balance would probably cause a glacier to advance.


This has been seen in some places, Scandinavia probably off the top of my head where increased winter precipitation caused some glaciers to advance over a period of a few years.

Stephen Wilde
10 January 2011 15:46:17
Maunder Minimum said:

"and the indications are that stratospheric warming during an extended minimum causes less of a temperature boundary at the tropopause, leading to a much diminished and meridional jetstream."

A couple of interesting points there:

i) An acceptance that the stratosphere warms when the sun is less active. Of course I agree having said that for some time but established climatology says that all the atmospheric column cools when the sun is less active and warms when the sun is more active.That is why thay needed to invoke CO2 and CFCs when the stratosphere cooled whilst the sun was active.

ii) A warmer stratosphere INCREASES the temperature differential at the tropopause because the lapse rate ensures that the air rising from the surface remains just as cold as before. The increased differential strengthens the inversion hence more and stronger high pressure cells because more of the energy in the rising air column is directed back downward. Thus the polar vortex becomes weaker as less energy enters it, AO turns negative and the extra high pressure pushes the jets equatorward but the net equatorward shift is expressed by increased meridionality.

Historically all past cooling spells have involved increased meridionality/equatorward jets.

Gandalf The White
10 January 2011 17:40:41




Historically all past cooling spells have involved increased meridionality/equatorward jets.

Originally Posted by: Stephen Wilde 


Interesting. And you have evidence of this I assume?


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Maunder Minimum
10 January 2011 19:14:43

Maunder Minimum said:

"and the indications are that stratospheric warming during an extended minimum causes less of a temperature boundary at the tropopause, leading to a much diminished and meridional jetstream."

A couple of interesting points there:

i) An acceptance that the stratosphere warms when the sun is less active. Of course I agree having said that for some time but established climatology says that all the atmospheric column cools when the sun is less active and warms when the sun is more active.That is why thay needed to invoke CO2 and CFCs when the stratosphere cooled whilst the sun was active.

ii) A warmer stratosphere INCREASES the temperature differential at the tropopause because the lapse rate ensures that the air rising from the surface remains just as cold as before. The increased differential strengthens the inversion hence more and stronger high pressure cells because more of the energy in the rising air column is directed back downward. Thus the polar vortex becomes weaker as less energy enters it, AO turns negative and the extra high pressure pushes the jets equatorward but the net equatorward shift is expressed by increased meridionality.

Historically all past cooling spells have involved increased meridionality/equatorward jets.

Originally Posted by: Stephen Wilde 


OK - I stand corrected on Point ii) - I had misunderstood the physics of what is happening at the tropopause.


I agree entirely that increased meridionality is the precursor of overall cooling, even though the Artic region itself may be warmer than otherwise as a consequence.


As for the proof, we have to wait a decade to see the results, assuming current patterns persist.


New world order coming.
Stephen Wilde
11 January 2011 10:35:04


Maunder Minimum said:


Historically all past cooling spells have involved increased meridionality/equatorward jets.

Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Interesting. And you have evidence of this I assume?


Originally Posted by: Stephen Wilde 


 


Do some reading, old chap. Start with H.H. Lamb's monumental works.


Also it is established AGW theory that a warming planet is associated with more poleward jets so how can you deny the reverse?

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