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Dive into the research topics where Alex D. Crawford is active.

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Featured researches published by Alex D. Crawford.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Variability, trends, and predictability of seasonal sea ice retreat and advance in the Chukchi Sea

Mark C. Serreze; Alex D. Crawford; Julienne Stroeve; Andrew P. Barrett; Rebecca A. Woodgate

As assessed over the period 1979–2014, the date that sea ice retreats to the shelf break (150 m contour) of the Chukchi Sea has a linear trend of −0.7 days per year. The date of seasonal ice advance back to the shelf break has a steeper trend of about +1.5 days per year, together yielding an increase in the open water period of 80 days. Based on detrended time series, we ask how interannual variability in advance and retreat dates relate to various forcing parameters including radiation fluxes, temperature and wind (from numerical reanalyses), and the oceanic heat inflow through the Bering Strait (from in situ moorings). Of all variables considered, the retreat date is most strongly correlated (r ∼ 0.8) with the April through June Bering Strait heat inflow. After testing a suite of statistical linear models using several potential predictors, the best model for predicting the date of retreat includes only the April through June Bering Strait heat inflow, which explains 68% of retreat date variance. The best model predicting the ice advance date includes the July through September inflow and the date of retreat, explaining 67% of advance date variance. We address these relationships by discussing heat balances within the Chukchi Sea, and the hypothesis of oceanic heat transport triggering ocean heat uptake and ice-albedo feedback. Developing an operational prediction scheme for seasonal retreat and advance would require timely acquisition of Bering Strait heat inflow data. Predictability will likely always be limited by the chaotic nature of atmospheric circulation patterns.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Using timing of ice retreat to predict timing of fall freeze-up in the Arctic

Julienne Stroeve; Alex D. Crawford

Reliable forecasts of the timing of sea ice advance are needed in order to reduce risks associated with operating in the Arctic as well as planning of human and environmental emergencies. This study investigates the use of a simple statistical model relating the timing of ice retreat to the timing of ice advance, taking advantage of the inherent predictive power supplied by the seasonal ice-albedo feedback and ocean heat uptake. Results show that using the last retreat date to predict the first advance date is applicable in some regions, such as Baffin Bay and the Laptev and East Siberian seas, where a predictive skill is found even after accounting for the long-term trend in both variables. Elsewhere, in the Arctic, there is some predictive skills depending on the year (e.g., Kara and Beaufort seas), but none in regions such as the Barents and Bering seas or the Sea of Okhotsk. While there is some suggestion that the relationship is strengthening over time, this may reflect that higher correlations are expected during periods when the underlying trend is strong.


Journal of Climate | 2016

Does the Summer Arctic Frontal Zone Influence Arctic Ocean Cyclone Activity

Alex D. Crawford; Mark C. Serreze

AbstractExtratropical cyclone activity over the central Arctic Ocean reaches its peak in summer. Previous research has argued for the existence of two external source regions for cyclones contributing to this summer maximum: the Eurasian continent interior and a narrow band of strong horizontal temperature gradients along the Arctic coastline known as the Arctic frontal zone (AFZ). This study incorporates data from an atmospheric reanalysis and an advanced cyclone detection and tracking algorithm to critically evaluate the relationship between the summer AFZ and cyclone activity in the central Arctic Ocean. Analysis of both individual cyclone tracks and seasonal fields of cyclone characteristics shows that the Arctic coast (and therefore the AFZ) is not a region of cyclogenesis. Rather, the AFZ acts as an intensification area for systems forming over Eurasia. As these systems migrate toward the Arctic Ocean, they experience greater deepening in situations when the AFZ is strong at midtropospheric levels. ...


Journal of Climate | 2017

Sea Ice Loss and Arctic Cyclone Activity from 1979 to 2014

Tomoko Koyama; Julienne Stroeve; John J. Cassano; Alex D. Crawford

AbstractExtensive summer sea ice loss has occurred within the Beaufort, Chukchi, East Siberian, and Laptev Seas over the last decade. Associated anomalies in sensible and latent heat fluxes in autumn have increased Arctic atmospheric precipitable water and air temperatures, with the potential to impact autumn and winter cyclone activity. To examine if a connection exists between recent Arctic sea ice loss and cyclone activity, several cyclone metrics from 60° to 90°N are analyzed. Results show that following years with less September sea ice, there is a subsequent increase in moisture availability, regional baroclinicity, and changes in vertical stability that favor cyclogenesis. However, tracking of individual cyclones indicates no coherent increase in cyclone frequency or intensity associated with sea ice loss. Furthermore, no robust northward progression of extreme cyclones is observed.


Journal of Climate | 2015

A New Look at the Summer Arctic Frontal Zone

Alex D. Crawford

AbstractA notable characteristic of the summertime Arctic is the existence of a narrow band of strong horizontal temperature gradients spanning the coastlines of Siberia, Alaska, and western Canada that extends through a considerable depth of the troposphere. Past research has associated this summer Arctic Frontal Zone (AFZ) with contrasts in atmospheric heating between the Arctic Ocean and snow-free land, with its regional strength strongly influenced by topography; however, little is known about its variability. In this study, output from the latest generation of global atmospheric reanalyses is used to better constrain and define the summer AFZ, including its spatial and seasonal characteristics. The relative importance of different factors linked to its variability is then evaluated. The AFZ is best expressed in July and is manifested aloft as a separate Arctic jet feature at about 250 hPa. It is clearly associated with differential atmospheric heating, as evidenced by the sharp difference in surface ...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Linkages between Arctic summer circulation regimes and regional sea ice anomalies

Amanda H. Lynch; Mark C. Serreze; Elizabeth N. Cassano; Alex D. Crawford; Julienne Stroeve

The downward trend in overall Arctic summer sea ice extent has been substantial, particularly in the last few decades. Departures in ice extent from year to year can be very large, however, in part due to the high variability in summer atmospheric circulation patterns. Anomalies in the Pacific sector ice cover can be partially compensated by anomalies of opposite sign in the Atlantic sector. An assessment of linkages between summer atmospheric patterns and sectoral anomalies in the area of maximum open water north of 70°N demonstrates that there is asymmetry in the mechanisms. Years with low ice extent and high open water fraction are uniformly associated with positive temperature anomalies and southerly flow in both the Atlantic and Pacific sectors. However, years with high extent and low open water fraction in both sectors reveal two dominant mechanisms. Some years with anomalously low maximum open water fraction are associated with negative temperature anomalies and southerly transport—a cool summer pattern that allows ice to persist over larger areas. However, other low open water years are characterized by an “ice factory” mechanism, whereby—even when melting—ice cover is continually replenished by advection from the north.


International Journal of Climatology | 2015

Extreme daily precipitation events at Spitsbergen, an Arctic Island

Mark C. Serreze; Alex D. Crawford; Andrew P. Barrett


Journal of Climate | 2017

Projected Changes in the Arctic Frontal Zone and Summer Arctic Cyclone Activity in the CESM Large Ensemble

Alex D. Crawford; Mark C. Serreze


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Variability, trends, and predictability of seasonal sea ice retreat and advance in the Chukchi Sea: SEA ICE IN THE CHUKCHI SEA

Mark C. Serreze; Alex D. Crawford; Julienne Stroeve; Andrew P. Barrett; Rebecca A. Woodgate


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Linkages between Arctic summer circulation regimes and regional sea ice anomalies: Arctic summer circulation and sea ice

Amanda H. Lynch; Mark C. Serreze; Elizabeth N. Cassano; Alex D. Crawford; Julienne Stroeve

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Mark C. Serreze

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Andrew P. Barrett

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Elizabeth N. Cassano

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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John J. Cassano

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Tomoko Koyama

University of Colorado Boulder

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