Workshop on the Role of Sea Ice and its Variability in the Climate System | (smr 4021)
Starts 29 Jul 2024
Ends 31 Jul 2024
Central European Time
ICTP
Kastler Lecture Hall (AGH)
Strada Costiera, 11
I - 34151 Trieste (Italy)
An ICTP hybrid Meeting
The sea ice plays a key role in the climate system, through its impact on radiative fluxes and the modulation of freshwater, energy and gas transfers between the atmosphere and the ocean. Sea ice is also key to polar ecosystems and plays a central role in the lives of human communities in the Arctic. Sea ice has been ongoing drastic changes over the past few decades in the Arctic, and more recently in the Antarctic, with important regional and global implications that we have yet to unravel and quantify.
The objective of this workshop is to review the recent advances on understanding the variability of the sea ice in both hemispheres and its linkage with the climate system, and to discuss the important research avenues and opportunities to refine this understanding. To do so, the workshop will feature keynotes, group and panel discussions, as well as poster presentations with a focus on the following topics, each covering both polar regions:
Sea ice prediction and projections
Drivers of the recent sea ice decline
MIZ and coastal processes
From Mosaic to Antarctica InSync: perspective and prospective
Keynote speakers:
T. BRACEGIRDLE, BAS, UK
M. GUPTA, Delft Institute of Technology, Netherlands
A. HAUMANN, AWI/LMU, Germany
P. HEIL, University of Tasmania, Australia
C. LIQUE, IFREMER, France
F. MASSONNET, UC Louvain, Belgium
M. NICOLAUS, Alfred-Wegener-Institut, Germany
M. REBESCO, OGS, Italy
S. STAMMERJOHN, University of Colorado Boulder, USA
M. VICHI, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Call for Contributed Abstracts: All applicants are encouraged to submit an abstract for a poster presentation. Abstract templates are available below for download.
Participants seeking to attend the whole period, can apply at the following link: