36 research outputs found

    Continuum-mechanical, Anisotropic Flow model for polar ice masses, based on an anisotropic Flow Enhancement factor

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    A complete theoretical presentation of the Continuum-mechanical, Anisotropic Flow model, based on an anisotropic Flow Enhancement factor (CAFFE model) is given. The CAFFE model is an application of the theory of mixtures with continuous diversity for the case of large polar ice masses in which induced anisotropy occurs. The anisotropic response of the polycrystalline ice is described by a generalization of Glen's flow law, based on a scalar anisotropic enhancement factor. The enhancement factor depends on the orientation mass density, which is closely related to the orientation distribution function and describes the distribution of grain orientations (fabric). Fabric evolution is governed by the orientation mass balance, which depends on four distinct effects, interpreted as local rigid body rotation, grain rotation, rotation recrystallization (polygonization) and grain boundary migration (migration recrystallization), respectively. It is proven that the flow law of the CAFFE model is truly anisotropic despite the collinearity between the stress deviator and stretching tensors.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure

    Ice Flow Over Bedrock Perturbations

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    The Longitudinal Stress and Strain-rate Gradients in Ice Masses

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    Stress Variations with Ice Flow Over Undulations

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    Modelling global warming and Antarctic sea-ice changes over the past century

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    An Analysis of the Relation Between the Surface and Bedrock Profiles of Ice Caps

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    The Dynamics of the Antarctic Ice Sheet

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    Measured and Computed Temperature Distributions in the Law Dome Ice Cap, Antarctica

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    Model Studies on Ice-Stream Surging

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