Abstract
AbstractSummer–autumn monthly sea-ice concentration anomaly (SICA) fields in Antarctica obtained from satellite data for the period 1979–2009 were analysed with Varimax-rotated T-mode principal component analysis (PCA). the first three PCA scores described the SICA spatial behaviour and explained 38.07% of the total variance. the related atmospheric circulation characteristics were analysed using 850 hPa height and surface air-temperature anomalies for the months clustered by the corresponding SICA composites, which were based on PCA loadings above a ±0.3 threshold. the principal characteristics of SICA can be seen between the Ross and Weddell Seas, areas that remained ice-covered during the analysis period. Elsewhere around Antarctica, small distinct characteristics occur mostly in embayments. the leading summer–autumn SICA pattern shows a structure with two centres of equal sign located one over the Weddell and the other over the Ross Sea–southwest Pacific Ocean sector and a centre of opposite sign over the Bellingshausen and Amundsen Seas. the second SICA pattern is represented by a dipole over the Weddell Sea as a result of an increase (decrease) in sea-ice concentration in the northern sector (positive phase) and a decrease (increase) in the southern region, together with a positive (negative) centre over the Ross and Amundsen Seas. the latter pattern is characterized by equal-sign anomalies on both sides of the Antarctic Peninsula and opposite-sign centres all around Antarctica with the highest intensity over the Ross Sea.
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