Complex climate response to astronomical forcing: The middle-Pleistocene transition in glacial cycles and changes in frequency locking
Ditlevsen, PD; Ashwin, PB
Date: 20 June 2018
Journal
Frontiers in Physics
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Through the past few million years large ice sheets have repeatedly grown and disappeared on the
Northern hemisphere. These are the Pleistocene glaciations. They are related to the changing solar
heating of the Earth due to changes in Earth’s orbit and axis of rotation. The climate response
to these changes is highly non-trivial and ...
Through the past few million years large ice sheets have repeatedly grown and disappeared on the
Northern hemisphere. These are the Pleistocene glaciations. They are related to the changing solar
heating of the Earth due to changes in Earth’s orbit and axis of rotation. The climate response
to these changes is highly non-trivial and non-linear, expressing the complex nature of the climate
system. Many aspects of glacial cycles still need a convincing explanation, one particular mystery
being the change from approximately 40 kyr (kilo year) glacial cycles to approximately 100 kyr cycles
around 1 million years ago. This transition is called the middle Pleistocene transition (MPT). Here
we review some conceptual models to explain the dynamics of glacial cycles and possible dynamical
causes of the MPT. We especially focus on the well studied van del Pol oscillator as a conceptual
model for the glacial cycles and propose that the MPT is a result of changes in frequency locking of
the climate system to the astronomical forcing. This is compared to a recently presented model that
relates the MPT to a transcritical bifurcation in the structure of a generic critical/slow manifold for
a fast-slow dynamical system.
Mathematics and Statistics
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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