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Featured researches published by Violette Zunz.


Nature Communications | 2017

Vertical ocean heat redistribution sustaining sea-ice concentration trends in the Ross Sea

Olivier Lecomte; Hugues Goosse; Thierry Fichefet; Casimir de Lavergne; Antoine Barthélemy; Violette Zunz

Several processes have been hypothesized to explain the slight overall expansion of Antarctic sea ice over the satellite observation era, including externally forced changes in local winds or in the Southern Ocean’s hydrological cycle, as well as internal climate variability. Here, we show the critical influence of an ocean–sea-ice feedback. Once initiated by an external perturbation, it may be sufficient to sustain the observed sea-ice expansion in the Ross Sea, the region with the largest and most significant expansion. We quantify the heat trapped at the base of the ocean mixed layer and demonstrate that it is of the same order of magnitude as the latent heat storage due to the long-term changes in sea-ice volume. The evidence thus suggests that the recent ice coverage increase in the Ross Sea could have been achieved through a reorganization of energy within the near-surface ice-ocean system.The mechanisms responsible for the overall expansion of Antarctic sea-ice in recent decades remain unclear. Here, using observations and model results, the authors show that ice-ocean feedbacks, triggered by an external perturbation, could be responsible for changes in sea-ice extent observed in the Ross Sea.


Climate Dynamics | 2018

Reemergence of Antarctic sea ice predictability and its link to deep ocean mixing in global climate models

Sylvain Marchi; Thierry Fichefet; Hugues Goosse; Violette Zunz; Steffen Tietsche; Jonathan J. Day; Ed Hawkins

Satellite observations show a small overall increase in Antarctic sea ice extent (SIE) over the period 1979–2015. However, this upward trend needs to be balanced against recent pronounced SIE fluctuations occurring there. In the space of 3 years, the SIE sank from its highest value ever reached in September 2014 to record low in February 2017. In this work, a set of six state-of-the-art global climate models is used to evaluate the potential predictability of the Antarctic sea ice at such timescales. This first multi-model study of Antarctic sea ice predictability reveals that the ice edge location can potentially be predicted up to 3 years in advance. However, the ice edge location predictability shows contrasted seasonal performances, with high predictability in winter and no predictability in summer. The reemergence of the predictability from one winter to next is provided by the ocean through its large thermal inertia. Sea surface heat anomalies are stored at depth at the end of the winter and influences the sea ice advance the following year as they resurface. The effectiveness of this mechanism across models is found to depend upon the depth of the mixed layer. One should be very cautious about these potential predictability estimates as there is evidence that the Antarctic sea ice predictability is promoted by deep Southern Ocean convection. We therefore suspect models with excessive convection to show higher sea ice potential predictability results due to an incorrect representation of the Southern Ocean.


The Cryosphere | 2012

How does internal variability influence the ability of CMIP5 models to reproduce the recent trend in Southern Ocean sea ice extent

Violette Zunz; Hugues Goosse; François Massonnet


The Cryosphere | 2013

Decadal trends in the Antarctic sea ice extent ultimately controlled by ice–ocean feedback

Hugues Goosse; Violette Zunz


Ocean Modelling | 2015

Assimilation of sea surface temperature, sea ice concentration and sea ice drift in a model of the Southern Ocean

Alexander Barth; Martin Canter; Bert Van Schaeybroeck; Stéphane Vannitsem; François Massonnet; Violette Zunz; Pierre Mathiot; A. Alvera-Azcárate; Jean-Marie Beckers


Ocean Modelling | 2016

Impact of surface wind biases on the Antarctic sea ice concentration budget in climate models

Olivier Lecomte; Hugues Goosse; Thierry Fichefet; Paul R. Holland; Petteri Uotila; Violette Zunz; Noriaki Kimura


Climate of The Past | 2016

Tropical forcing of increased Southern Ocean climate variability revealed by a 140-year subantarctic temperature reconstruction

Chris S. M. Turney; Christopher J. Fogwill; Jonathan G. Palmer; Erik van Sebille; Zoë Thomas; Matt S. McGlone; Sarah J. Richardson; Janet M. Wilmshurst; Pavla Fenwick; Violette Zunz; Hugues Goosse; Kerry Jayne Wilson; Lionel Carter; Mathew Lipson; Richard T. Jones; Melanie A. Harsch; Graeme F. Clark; Ezequiel M. Marzinelli; Tracey L. Rogers; Eleanor Rainsley; Laura M. Ciasto; Stephanie Waterman; Elizabeth R. Thomas; Martin Visbeck


The Cryosphere | 2014

Influence of freshwater input on the skill of decadal forecast of sea ice in the Southern Ocean

Violette Zunz; Hugues Goosse


Climate Dynamics | 2015

Impact of the initialisation on the predictability of the Southern Ocean sea ice at interannual to multi-decadal timescales

Violette Zunz; Hugues Goosse; Svetlana Dubinkina


The EGU General Assembly | 2014

Prospects for better seasonal Arctic sea ice predictions from multivariate initialization

François Massonnet; Hugues Goosse; Thierry Fichefet; Violette Zunz

Collaboration


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Hugues Goosse

Université catholique de Louvain

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Thierry Fichefet

Université catholique de Louvain

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François Massonnet

Université catholique de Louvain

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Olivier Lecomte

Université catholique de Louvain

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Svetlana Dubinkina

Université catholique de Louvain

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Antoine Barthélemy

Université catholique de Louvain

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Bert Van Schaeybroeck

Royal Meteorological Institute

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