Abstract

AbstractOcean warming around Antarctica has the potential to trigger marine ice‐sheet instabilities. It has been suggested that abrupt and irreversible cold‐to‐warm ocean tipping points may exist, with possible domino effect from ocean to ice‐sheet tipping points. A 1/4° ocean model configuration of the Amundsen Sea sector is used to investigate the existence of ocean tipping points, their drivers, and their potential impact on ice‐shelf basal melting. We apply idealized atmospheric perturbations of either heat, freshwater, or momentum fluxes, and we characterize the key physical processes at play in warm‐to‐cold and cold‐to‐warm climate transitions. Relatively weak perturbations of any of these fluxes are able to switch the Amundsen Sea to an intermittent or permanent cold state, that is, with ocean temperatures close to the surface freezing point and very low ice‐shelf melt rate. The transitions are reversible, that is, canceling the atmospheric perturbation brings the ocean system back to its unperturbed state within a few decades. All the transitions are primarily driven by changes in surface buoyancy fluxes resulting from the freshwater flux perturbation or from modified net sea‐ice production due to either heat flux or sea‐ice advection anomalies. These changes affect the vertical ocean stratification over the continental shelf and thereby the eastward undercurrent at the shelf break, which both impact ice‐shelf melting. As sea‐ice induced deep convection is already quite limited in present‐day conditions, surface buoyancy gain in a warmer climate has relatively little effect on deep ocean properties compared to colder climate conditions.

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