Old Leatherneck,
With reference to this:
PIOMAS volume broken into less than and greater than 2m thick in March.
I'd like to suggest:
XXXX - 2006 Phase 1. Removal of old ice volume.
Slow but gradually increasing rate of change in area / extent.
2007 - 2010 Phase 2. Consolidation post 2007 with continuing loss of old ice.
Step drop in summer extent, step increase in annual range.
2011 - XXXX Phase 3. Period of increased volatility in which the bulk of the final ice volume loss occurs.
Continued loss of old ice, step drop in thicker older ice. New record tie for 2011, new record for 2012, new record for 2013? Increased area and volume losses during the melt season (June to Sept and April to June respectively).
Period of increased volatility of ice due to thinner ice and greater ease with which new open water can be formed.
Type of transition to first ice free year, not known at present:
A Rapid crash to zero? or
B Tail, existing for some years after rapid ice loss event ends, causing a cessation of trend in summer minimum volume loss.?
But I see Phase 3 as containing the bulk of the transition volume loss.
Reasons for A.
Increased ice/ocean albedo effect.
Increased melt ponds, and attendant albedo increase due to FYI.
Increased ridging during summer due to thinner ice.
Increased brine rejection causing enhanced ventilation and ocean heat influx.
Reasons for B.
Decreased incident solar radiation at end of season close to the pole.
Effect of abyssal deep below the ice in the centre of the pack.
Increased heat loss in autumn/winter.
Increased growth of FYI in response to lower sea ice minima (this should level out at over 20k km^3 volume = 10M km^2 (area of ice in Arctic ocean) * 2m (current equilibrium thickness (approximate) of first year ice).
There are more reasons, I suspect these are the main ones.
Phase 4. Consolidation of seasonally sea ice free state. Gradual increase of ice free period length determined by winter thinning and ocean warming as the period of ice free gains more energy (ice albedo).
I don't think it's possible to go into the perennially sea ice free until the cloud response is better understood. Research during phase 4 should provide enough information to help with that issue.