Pelletier, J.D., Coherence resonance and ice ages, Journal of Geophysical Research, 108, doi:10.1029/2002JD003120, 2003
Abstract: The
processes and feedbacks responsible for the 100-kyr cycle of Late
Pleistocene global climate change are still being debated. This paper
presents a numerical model that integrates (1) long-wavelength outgoing
radiation, (2) the ice-albedo feedback, and (3) lithospheric deflection
within the simple conceptual framework of coherence resonance.
Coherence resonance is a dynamical process that results in the
amplification of internally generated variability at particular periods
in a system with bistability and delay feedback. In the Late
Pleistocene climate system, bistability results from a combination of
long-wavelength outgoing radiation and the ice-albedo feedback. These
processes are in 13 equilibrium at interglacial and full-glacial
conditions. Delay feedback results from the influence of lithospheric
deflection on ice sheet advance and retreat. This process has commonly
been represented in numerical climate models by complex models of ice
sheet dynamics. As an alternative, the present model incorporates ice
sheet dynamics implicitly by using the observed relationship between
ice coverage and global temperature. The result is a simple,
well-constrained model for the Late Pleistocene global climate system
with only one free parameter. The model accurately reproduces the
climate variability recorded in the Vostok ice core from timescales of
several thousand to one million years, including the histograms and
power-spectral behavior of the data. The 100-kyr cycle is a free
oscillation in the model, present even in the absence of external
forcing. The model also reproduces smaller-amplitude periodicities at
odd harmonics of 100 kyr, suggesting that a significant portion of the
spectral power at the Milankovitch bands of 41 and 29 kyr may be
internally generated. Finally, the development of 100-kyr oscillations
in the Mid-Pleistocene may be understood within this model framework as
the transition from a climate with one stable state to a system with
two stable states brought about by the development of large continental
ice sheets and the addition of the ice-albedo feedback to the climate
system.
Sample figures:
