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Dive into the research topics where Kyle C. Armour is active.

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Featured researches published by Kyle C. Armour.


Journal of Climate | 2013

Time-Varying Climate Sensitivity from Regional Feedbacks

Kyle C. Armour; Cecilia M. Bitz; Gerard H. Roe

AbstractThe sensitivity of global climate with respect to forcing is generally described in terms of the global climate feedback—the global radiative response per degree of global annual mean surface temperature change. While the global climate feedback is often assumed to be constant, its value—diagnosed from global climate models—shows substantial time variation under transient warming. Here a reformulation of the global climate feedback in terms of its contributions from regional climate feedbacks is proposed, providing a clear physical insight into this behavior. Using (i) a state-of-the-art global climate model and (ii) a low-order energy balance model, it is shown that the global climate feedback is fundamentally linked to the geographic pattern of regional climate feedbacks and the geographic pattern of surface warming at any given time. Time variation of the global climate feedback arises naturally when the pattern of surface warming evolves, actuating feedbacks of different strengths in different...


Journal of Climate | 2011

Persistence and Inherent Predictability of Arctic Sea Ice in a GCM Ensemble and Observations

Edward Blanchard-Wrigglesworth; Kyle C. Armour; Cecilia M. Bitz; Eric T. DeWeaver

Abstract The temporal characteristics of Arctic sea ice extent and area are analyzed in terms of their lagged correlation in observations and a GCM ensemble. Observations and model output generally match, exhibiting a red-noise spectrum, where significant correlation (or memory) is lost within 2–5 months. September sea ice extent is significantly correlated with extent of the previous August and July, and thus these months show a predictive skill of the summer minimum extent. Beyond this initial loss of memory, there is an increase in correlation—a reemergence of memory—that is more ubiquitous in the model than observations. There are two distinct modes of memory reemergence in the model. The first, a summer-to-summer reemergence arises within the model from the persistence of thickness anomalies and their influence on ice area. The second, which is also seen in observations, is associated with anomalies in the growth season that originate in the melt season. This reemergence stems from the several-month ...


Journal of Climate | 2012

Climate Sensitivity of the Community Climate System Model, Version 4

Cecilia M. Bitz; Karen M. Shell; Peter R. Gent; David A. Bailey; Gokhan Danabasoglu; Kyle C. Armour; Marika M. Holland; Jeffrey T. Kiehl

Equilibrium climate sensitivity of the Community Climate System Model, version 4 (CCSM4) is 3.208C for 18 horizontal resolution in each component. This is about a half degree Celsius higher than in the previous version (CCSM3). The transient climate sensitivity of CCSM4 at 18 resolution is 1.728C, which is about 0.28C higher than in CCSM3. These higher climate sensitivities in CCSM4 cannot be explained by the change to a preindustrial baseline climate. This study uses the radiative kernel technique to show that, from CCSM3 to CCSM4, the global mean lapse-rate feedback declines in magnitude and the shortwave cloud feedback increases. These two warming effects are partially canceled by cooling because of slight decreases in the global mean water vapor feedback and longwave cloud feedback from CCSM3 to CCSM4. A new formulation of the mixed layer, slab-ocean model in CCSM4 attempts to reproduce the SST and sea ice climatology from an integration with a full-depth ocean, and it is integrated with a dynamic sea ice model. These new features allow an isolation of the influence of ocean dynamical changes on the climate response when comparing integrations with the slab ocean and full-depth ocean. The transient climate response of the full-depth ocean version is 0.54 of the equilibrium climate sensitivity when estimated with the new slab-ocean model version for both CCSM3 and CCSM4. The authors argue the ratio is the same in both versions because they have about the same zonal mean pattern of change in ocean surface heat flux, which broadly resembles the zonal mean pattern of net feedback strength.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

The dependence of transient climate sensitivity and radiative feedbacks on the spatial pattern of ocean heat uptake

Brian E. J. Rose; Kyle C. Armour; David S. Battisti; Nicole Feldl; Daniel D. B. Koll

The effect of ocean heat uptake (OHU) on transient global warming is studied in a multimodel framework. Simple heat sinks are prescribed in shallow aquaplanet ocean mixed layers underlying atmospheric general circulation models independently and combined with CO_2 forcing. Sinks are localized to either tropical or high latitudes, representing distinct modes of OHU found in coupled simulations. Tropical OHU produces modest cooling at all latitudes, offsetting only a fraction of CO_2 warming. High-latitude OHU produces three times more global mean cooling in a strongly polar-amplified pattern. Global sensitivities in each scenario are set primarily by large differences in local shortwave cloud feedbacks, robust across models. Differences in atmospheric energy transport set the pattern of temperature change. Results imply that global and regional warming rates depend sensitively on regional ocean processes setting the OHU pattern, and that equilibrium climate sensitivity cannot be reliably estimated from transient observations.


Climate Dynamics | 2015

The ocean’s role in the transient response of climate to abrupt greenhouse gas forcing

John Marshall; Jeffery R. Scott; Kyle C. Armour; J.-M. Campin; Maxwell Kelley; Anastasia Romanou

We study the role of the ocean in setting the patterns and timescale of the transient response of the climate to anthropogenic greenhouse gas forcing. A novel framework is set out which involves integration of an ocean-only model in which the anthropogenic temperature signal is forced from the surface by anomalous downwelling heat fluxes and damped at a rate controlled by a ‘climate feedback’ parameter. We observe a broad correspondence between the evolution of the anthropogenic temperature (


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2014

The ocean's role in polar climate change: asymmetric Arctic and Antarctic responses to greenhouse gas and ozone forcing*

John Marshall; Kyle C. Armour; Jeffery R. Scott; Yavor Kostov; Ute Hausmann; David Ferreira; Theodore G. Shepherd; Cecilia M. Bitz


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

The reversibility of sea ice loss in a state-of-the-art climate model

Kyle C. Armour; Ian Eisenman; Edward Blanchard-Wrigglesworth; K. E. McCusker; Cecilia M. Bitz

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Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Impact of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation on ocean heat storage and transient climate change

Yavor Kostov; Kyle C. Armour; John Marshall


Journal of Climate | 2014

The Interannual Variability of Tropical Precipitation and Interhemispheric Energy Transport

Aaron Donohoe; John Marshall; David Ferreira; Kyle C. Armour; David McGee

Tanthro) in our simplified ocean-only model and that of coupled climate models perturbed by a quadrupling of


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Shortwave and longwave radiative contributions to global warming under increasing CO2

Aaron Donohoe; Kyle C. Armour; Angeline G. Pendergrass; David S. Battisti

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Gerard H. Roe

University of Washington

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John Marshall

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Aaron Donohoe

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Yavor Kostov

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jeffery R. Scott

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nicole Feldl

University of California

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Angeline G. Pendergrass

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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