EGU2020-11345, updated on 12 Jun 2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-11345
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Nonlinear Climate Dynamics: from Deterministic Behavior to Stochastic Excitability and Chaos

Michel Crucifix1, Dmitri Alexandrov2, irina Bashkirtseva2, and Lev Ryashko2
Michel Crucifix et al.
  • 1Universite catholique de Louvain, UCL, ELIC / TECLIM, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium (michel.crucifix@uclouvain.be)
  • 2Ural Federal University, Department of Theoretical and Mathematical Physics, Ekaterinburg, Russia

Glacial-interglacial cycles are global climatic changes which have characterised the last 3 million years. The eight latest
glacial-interglacial cycles represent changes in sea level over 100 m, and their average duration was around 100 000 years. There is a
long tradition of modelling glacial-interglacial cycles with low-order dynamical systems. In one view, the cyclic phenomenon is caused by
non-linear interactions between components of the climate system: The dynamical system model which represents Earth dynamics has a limit cycle. In an another view, the variations in ice volume and ice sheet extent are caused by changes in Earth's orbit, possibly amplified by feedbacks.
This response and internal feedbacks need to be non-linear to explain the asymmetric character of glacial-interglacial cycles and their duration. A third view sees glacial-interglacial cycles as a limit cycle synchronised on the orbital forcing.

The purpose of the present contribution is to pay specific attention to the effects of stochastic forcing. Indeed, the trajectories
obtained in presence of noise are not necessarily noised-up versions of the deterministic trajectories. They may follow pathways which
have no analogue in the deterministic version of the model.  Our purpose is to
demonstrate the mechanisms by which stochastic excitation may generate such large-scale oscillations and induce intermittency. To this end, we
consider a series of models previously introduced in the literature, starting by autonomous models with two variables, and then three
variables. The properties of stochastic trajectories are understood by reference to the bifurcation diagram, the vector field, and a
method called stochastic sensitivity analysis.  We then introduce models accounting for the orbital forcing, and distinguish forced and
synchronised ice-age scenarios, and show again how noise may generate trajectories which have no immediate analogue in the determinstic model. 

How to cite: Crucifix, M., Alexandrov, D., Bashkirtseva, I., and Ryashko, L.: Nonlinear Climate Dynamics: from Deterministic Behavior to Stochastic Excitability and Chaos, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-11345, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-11345, 2020