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Dive into the research topics where Hansi K. A. Singh is active.

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Featured researches published by Hansi K. A. Singh.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Influence of West Antarctic Ice Sheet collapse on Antarctic surface climate

Eric J. Steig; Kathleen Huybers; Hansi K. A. Singh; Nathan J. Steiger; Qinghua Ding; Dargan M. W. Frierson; Trevor James Popp; James W. C. White

Climate model simulations are used to examine the impact of a collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) on the surface climate of Antarctica. The lowered topography following WAIS collapse produces anomalous cyclonic circulation with increased flow of warm, maritime air toward the South Pole and cold-air advection from the East Antarctic plateau toward the Ross Sea and Marie Byrd Land, West Antarctica. Relative to the background climate, areas in East Antarctica that are adjacent to the WAIS warm, while substantial cooling (several ∘C) occurs over parts of West Antarctica. Anomalously low isotope-paleotemperature values at Mount Moulton, West Antarctica, compared with ice core records in East Antarctica, are consistent with collapse of the WAIS during the last interglacial period, Marine Isotope Stage 5e. More definitive evidence might be recoverable from an ice core record at Hercules Dome, East Antarctica, which would experience significant warming and positive oxygen isotope anomalies if the WAIS collapsed.


Journal of Climate | 2016

A Mathematical Framework for Analysis of Water Tracers. Part II: Understanding Large-Scale Perturbations in the Hydrological Cycle due to CO2 Doubling

Hansi K. A. Singh; Cecilia M. Bitz; Aaron Donohoe; Jesse Nusbaumer; David Noone

AbstractThe aerial hydrological cycle response to CO2 doubling from a Lagrangian, rather than Eulerian, perspective is evaluated using information from numerical water tracers implemented in a global climate model. While increased surface evaporation (both local and remote) increases precipitation globally, changes in transport are necessary to create a spatial pattern where precipitation decreases in the subtropics and increases substantially at the equator. Overall, changes in the convergence of remotely evaporated moisture are more important to the overall precipitation change than changes in the amount of locally evaporated moisture that precipitates in situ. It is found that CO2 doubling increases the fraction of locally evaporated moisture that is exported, enhances moisture exchange between ocean basins, and shifts moisture convergence within a given basin toward greater distances between moisture source (evaporation) and sink (precipitation) regions. These changes can be understood in terms of the...


Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | 2016

A mathematical framework for analysis of water tracers: Part 1: Development of theory and application to the preindustrial mean state

Hansi K. A. Singh; Cecilia M. Bitz; Jesse Nusbaumer; David Noone

A new matrix operator framework is developed to analyze results from climate modeling studies that employ numerical water tracers (WTs), which track the movement of water in the aerial hydrological cycle from evaporation to precipitation. Model WT output is related to the fundamental equation of hydrology, and the moisture flux divergence is subdivided into the divergence of locally evaporated moisture and the convergence of remotely evaporated moisture. The formulation also separates locally and remotely sourced precipitation. The remote contribution (also the remote moisture convergence) may be further subdivided into zonal, meridional, intrabasin, and interbasin parts. This framework is applied to the preindustrial climate as simulated by a global climate model in which water has been tagged in 10° latitude bands in each of the major ocean basins, and in which each major land mass has been tagged separately. New insights from the method reveal fundamental differences between the major ocean basins in locally sourced precipitation, remotely sourced precipitation, and their relative partitioning. Per unit area, the subtropical Atlantic is the largest global moisture source, providing precipitable water to adjacent land areas and to the eastern Pacific tropics while retaining the least for in situ precipitation. Subtropical moisture is least divergent over the Pacific, which is the smallest moisture source (per unit area) for global land areas. Basins also differ in how subtropical moisture is partitioned between tropical, midlatitude, and land regions. Part II will apply this framework to hydrological cycle perturbations due to CO2 doubling.


Journal of Climate | 2014

A Heuristic Model of Dansgaard–Oeschger Cycles. Part I: Description, Results, and Sensitivity Studies

Hansi K. A. Singh; David S. Battisti; Cecilia M. Bitz

AbstractA simple model for studying the Dansgaard–Oeschger (D-O) cycles of the last glacial period is presented, based on the T. Dokken et al. hypothesis for D-O cycles. The model is a column model representing the Nordic seas and is composed of ocean boxes stacked below a one-layer sea ice model with an energy-balance atmosphere; no changes in the large-scale ocean overturning circulation are invoked. Parameterizations are included for latent heat polynyas and sea ice export from the column. The resulting heuristic model was found to cycle between stadial and interstadial states at times scales similar to those seen in the proxy observational data, with the presence or absence of perennial sea ice in the Nordic seas being the defining characteristic for each of these states. The major discrepancy between the modeled oscillations and the proxy record is in the length of the interstadial phase, which is shorter than that observed. The modeled oscillations were found to be robust to parameter changes, inclu...


Journal of Climate | 2016

The Global Climate Response to Lowering Surface Orography of Antarctica and the Importance of Atmosphere–Ocean Coupling

Hansi K. A. Singh; Cecilia M. Bitz; Dargan M. W. Frierson

AbstractA global climate model is used to study the effect of flattening the orography of the Antarctic Ice Sheet on climate. A general result is that the Antarctic continent and the atmosphere aloft warm, while there is modest cooling globally. The large local warming over Antarctica leads to increased outgoing longwave radiation, which drives anomalous southward energy transport toward the continent and cooling elsewhere. Atmosphere and ocean both anomalously transport energy southward in the Southern Hemisphere. Near Antarctica, poleward energy and momentum transport by baroclinic eddies strengthens. Anomalous southward cross-equatorial energy transport is associated with a northward shift in the intertropical convergence zone. In the ocean, anomalous southward energy transport arises from a slowdown of the upper cell of the oceanic meridional overturning circulation and a weakening of the horizontal ocean gyres, causing sea ice in the Northern Hemisphere to expand and the Arctic to cool. Comparison wi...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Greater aerial moisture transport distances with warming amplify interbasin salinity contrasts

Hansi K. A. Singh; Aaron Donohoe; Cecilia M. Bitz; Jesse Nusbaumer; David Noone

The distance atmospheric moisture travels is fundamental to Earths hydrologic cycle, governing how much evaporation is exported versus precipitated locally. The present day tropical Atlantic is one region that exports much locally-evaporated moisture away, leading to more saline surface waters in the Atlantic compared to the Indo-Pacific at similar latitudes. Here, we use a state-of-the-art global climate model equipped with numerical water tracers to show that over half of the atmospheric freshwater exported from the Atlantic originates as evaporation in the northern Atlantic subtropics, primarily between 10N and 20N, and is transported across Central America via prevailing easterlies into the equatorial Pacific. We find enhanced moisture export from the Atlantic to Pacific with warming is due to greater distances between moisture source and sink regions, which increases moisture export from the Atlantic at the expense of local precipitation. Distance traveled increases due to longer moisture residence times, not simply Clausius-Clapeyron scaling.


Journal of Climate | 2017

A Source–Receptor Perspective on the Polar Hydrologic Cycle: Sources, Seasonality, and Arctic–Antarctic Parity in the Hydrologic Cycle Response to CO2 Doubling

Hansi K. A. Singh; Cecilia M. Bitz; Aaron Donohoe; Philip J. Rasch

AbstractNumerical water tracers implemented in a global climate model are used to study how polar hydroclimate responds to CO2-induced warming from a source–receptor perspective. Although remote moisture sources contribute substantially more to polar precipitation year-round in the mean state, an increase in locally sourced moisture is crucial to the winter season polar precipitation response to greenhouse gas forcing. In general, the polar hydroclimate response to CO2-induced warming is strongly seasonal: over both the Arctic and Antarctic, locally sourced moisture constitutes a larger fraction of the precipitation in winter, while remote sources become even more dominant in summer. Increased local evaporation in fall and winter is coincident with sea ice retreat, which greatly augments local moisture sources in these seasons. In summer, however, larger contributions from more remote moisture source regions are consistent with an increase in moisture residence times and a longer moisture transport length...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Greater aerial moisture transport distances with warming amplify interbasin salinity contrasts: ATLANTIC-PACIFIC SALINITY CONTRAST

Hansi K. A. Singh; Aaron Donohoe; Cecilia M. Bitz; Jesse Nusbaumer; David Noone


Archive | 2015

Combined ice core and climate-model evidence for the collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet during Marine Isotope Stage 5e.

Eric J. Steig; Kathleen Huybers; Hansi K. A. Singh; Nathan J. Steiger; Trevor James Popp


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Influence of West Antarctic Ice Sheet collapse on Antarctic surface climate: CLIMATE RESPONSE TO WAIS COLLAPSE

Eric J. Steig; Kathleen Huybers; Hansi K. A. Singh; Nathan J. Steiger; Qinghua Ding; Dargan M. W. Frierson; Trevor James Popp; James W. C. White

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Aaron Donohoe

University of Washington

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David Noone

Oregon State University

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Jesse Nusbaumer

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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Eric J. Steig

University of Washington

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Kathleen Huybers

Pacific Lutheran University

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Qinghua Ding

University of Washington

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