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Will Arctic sea ice thickness initialization improve seasonal forecast skill?
Arctic sea ice thickness is thought to be an important predictor of Arctic sea ice extent.
However, coupled seasonal forecast systems do not generally use sea ice thickness observations in their
initialization and are therefore missing a potentially important source of additional skill. To investigate
how large this source is, a set of ensemble potential predictability experiments with a global climate
model, initialized with and without knowledge of the sea ice thickness initial state, have been run. These
experiments show that accurate knowledge of the sea ice thickness field is crucially important for sea
ice concentration and extent forecasts up to 8 months ahead, especially in summer. Perturbing sea ice
thickness also has a significant impact on the forecast error in Arctic 2 m temperature a few months ahead.
These results suggest that advancing capabilities to observe and assimilate sea ice thickness into coupled
forecast systems could significantly increase skill
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