How do you bridge a divide with attendees like Steven Goddard (who believes that it snows dry ice in antarctica therefore proving all textbooks on physical chemistry wrong, and that
arctic sea ice volume is drastically increasing), or Tallbloke (who rejects the last 90 - ish years of physics, starting with Einstein, and insists that the ether is real), etc etc?
Klazes (Public), 3.6 (95 % confidence interval of + / - 0.9), Statistical September extent is predicted using an estimated minimum value of the PIOMAS
arctic sea ice volume and a simple model for volume - extent relationship.
Not exact matches
Laxon, S. W., and coauthors (2013), CryoSat - 2 estimates of
arctic sea ice thickness and
volume, Geophys.
A good point as
arctic regions that are hit with warmer water streams will prevent
sea ice extent while those with colder ones can massivly increase in
volume when the air is cold enough though no growth would be visible from the top down view.
The two - day FAMOS workshop will include sessions on 2017
sea ice highlights and
sea ice / ocean predictions, reports of working groups conducting collaborative projects, large - scale
arctic climate modeling (
ice - ocean, regional coupled, global coupled), small (eddies) and very small (mixing) processes and their representation and / or parameterization in models, and new hypotheses, data sets, intriguing findings, proposals for new experiments and plans for 2018 FAMOS special
volume of publications.
Record droughts in many areas of the world, the loss of
arctic sea ice — what you see is an increasing trend that is superimposed on annual variablity (no bets on what happens next year, but the five - to - ten year average in global temperatures,
sea surface temperatures, ocean heat content — those will increase — and
ice sheet
volumes, tropical glacier
volumes,
sea ice extent will decrease.
MODELING OF FUTURE
ARCTIC SEA ICE CHANGE «Given the estimated trend and the
volume estimate for October — November of 2007 at less than 9,000 km3 (Kwok et al. 2009), one can project that at this rate it would take only 9 more years or until 2016 ± 3 years to reach a nearly
ice - free
Arctic Ocean in summer.»