Abstract

AbstractA distinguishing feature of Arctic sea ice is the rapid declining in the Pacific Arctic Sector (PAS) in recent years. The atmospheric variability during spring (March‐May) plays a critical role in determining the sea ice extent (SIE) during the following summer. The summertime (June‐August) SIE reduction in the eastern part of PAS, including the East Siberian Sea and the Laptev Sea, is strongly related to the first two leading atmospheric circulation modes in spring, the Arctic Oscillation and the Arctic Dipole, retrieved from empirical orthogonal function analysis. Here, we show that the third leading mode of atmospheric circulation in spring, namely the Barents‐Beaufort Oscillation (BBO), can also change the summer SIE, especially on the western regime of the PAS across the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas. We find that a positive phase of springtime BBO (i.e., BBO+), relative to the BBO−, acts to decrease sea ice thickness via advection and generate sea ice deformation through divergence and shear processes, thereby preconditioning for a rapid sea ice loss within the PAS in the following summer. Furthermore, the occurrence of BBO is state‐dependent and potentially modulated by the phase shift of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). Since the mid‐1990s, the AMO (PDO) index has changed from a dominant negative (positive) to a positive (negative) phase. These phase shifts in AMO and PDO would have contributed to the subsequently increased appearance of anomalous BBO+ after 2000 and enhanced the summertime sea ice loss in the western regions of the PAS in recent years.

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