59 research outputs found
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Improving the spatial distribution of modeled Arctic sea ice thickness
The spatial distribution of ice thickness/draft in the Arctic Ocean is examined using a sea ice model. A comparison of model predictions with submarine observations of sea ice draft made during cruises between 1987 and 1997 reveals that the model has the same deficiencies found in previous studies, namely ice that is too thick in the Beaufort Sea and too thin near the North Pole. We find that increasing the large scale shear strength of the sea ice leads to substantial improvements in the model's spatial distribution of sea ice thickness, and simultaneously improves the agreement between modeled and ERS-derived 1993â2001 mean winter ice thickness
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Impact of a new anisotropic rheology on simulations of Arctic sea ice
new rheology that explicitly accounts for the subcontinuum anisotropy of the sea ice cover is implemented into the Los Alamos sea ice model. This is in contrast to all models of sea ice included in global circulation models that use an isotropic rheology. The model contains one new prognostic variable, the local structure tensor, which quantifies the degree of anisotropy of the sea ice, and two parameters that set the time scale of the evolution of this tensor. The anisotropic rheology provides a subcontinuum description of the mechanical behavior of sea ice and accounts for a continuum scale stress with large shear to compression ratio and tensile stress component. Results over the Arctic of a stand-alone version of the model are presented and anisotropic model sensitivity runs are compared with a reference elasto-visco-plastic simulation. Under realistic forcing sea ice quickly becomes highly anisotropic over large length scales, as is observed from satellite imagery. The influence of the new rheology on the state and dynamics of the sea ice cover is discussed. Our reference anisotropic run reveals that the new rheology leads to a substantial change of the spatial distribution of ice thickness and ice drift relative to the reference standard visco-plastic isotropic run, with ice thickness regionally increased by more than 1âm, and ice speed reduced by up to 50%
Sea ice circulation in the Laptev Sea and ice export to the Arctic Ocean: Sea ice circulation in the Laptev Sea and ice export to the Arctic Ocean: Results from satellite remote sensing and numerical modeling
Sea ice circulation in the Laptev Sea and ice exchange with the Arctic Ocean have been studied based on remote sensing data and numerical modeling. Ice drift patterns for shortâ and longâterm periods were retrieved from successive Okean radar images and Special Sensor Microwave/Imager data for the winters 1987/1988 and 1994/1995. Seasonal and interannual variabilities of ice drift in the Laptev Sea and ice exchange with the Arctic Ocean during the period from 1979 to 1995 were studied with a largeâscale dynamicâthermodynamic sea ice model. During an âaverage year,â sea ice was exported from the Laptev Sea through its northern and eastern boundaries, with maximum and minimum export occurring in February and August, respectively. The winter ice outflow from the Laptev Sea varied between 251,000 km2 (1984/1985) and 732,000 km2 (1988/1989) with the mean value of 483,000 km2. Sea ice was exported into the East Siberian Sea mostly in summers with the mean value of 69,000 km2. Out of the 17 investigated summers, 12 were characterized by sea ice import from the Arctic Ocean into the Laptev Sea through its northern boundary. Magnitude and direction of ice export from the Laptev Sea corresponded with the largeâscale Arctic Ocean drift patterns during periods of prevailing cyclonic or anticyclonic circulation. Based on a semiempirical method that has been validated with the largeâscale model and satellite data, ice exchange between the Laptev Sea and the Arctic Ocean during the period from 1936 to 1995 has been estimated as 309,000km2 with strong interannual variability and no significant trend apparent
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The future of sea ice modelling: where do we go from here?
Earth System Models (ESMs) include a sea ice component to physically represent sea ice changes and impacts on planetary albedo and ocean circulation (Manabe & Stouffer, 1980). Most contemporary sea ice models describe the sea ice pack as a continuum material, a principle laid by the AIDJEX (Arctic Ice Dynamics Joint EXperiment) group in the 1970s (Pritchard, 1980). Initially intended for climate studies, the sea ice components in ESMs are now used across a wide range of resolutions, including very high resolutions more than 100 times finer than those they were designed for, in an increasingly wide range of applications that challenge the AIDJEX model foundations (Coon et al., 2007), including operational weather and marine forecasts. It is therefore sensible to question the applicability of contemporary sea ice models to these applications. Are there better alternatives available? Large advances in high performance computing (HPC) have been made over the last few decades and this trend will continue. What constraints and opportunities will these HPC changes provide for contemporary sea ice models? Can continuum models scale well for use in exascale computing?
To address these important questions, members of the sea ice modelling community met in September 2019 for a workshop in Laugarvatn, Iceland. Thirty-two sea ice modelling scientists from 11 countries across Europe and North America attended, spanning 3 key areas: (i) developers of sea-ice models; (ii) users of sea-ice models in an ESM context; (iii) users of sea64 ice models for operational forecasting and (re)analyses. The workshop was structured around 2 key themes:
1. Scientific and technical validity and limitations of the physics and numerical approaches used in the current models
2. Physical processes and complexity: bridging the gap between weather and climate requirements
For each theme, 5 keynote speakers were invited to address the motivating questions and stimulate debate. Further details can be found in the Supplementary Material
Simulation of sea ice transport through Fram Strait: Natural variability and sensitivity to forcing
The interannual variability of the sea ice transport through Fram Strait is simulated with a dynamicâthermodynamic sea ice model. Forcing with daily varying wind fields for the 7âyear period 1986â1992 causes a high variability of sea ice drift on timescales from days to years. Annual means of simulated ice transport through Pram Strait differ up to a factor of 2. Additional sensitivity studies investigate the response of sea ice transports to variations of the prescribed atmospheric and oceanic forcing. Wind speed, ocean current speed, air temperature, and precipitation rate are systematically varied over a wide range. The model predicts an almost linear relation of ice transport with wind speed and ocean current, a strong, nonlinear relation with air temperature, and a rather small sensitivity to changes in precipitation. The results show that the interannual variability of wind forcing causes considerable variations of sea ice export through Fram Strait. The fluxes of freshwater and negative latent heat associated with the sea ice transport can significantly affect the ocean circulation in the Greenland Sea and in the North Atlantic. This shows how variations of the ocean circulation are coupled to the variability of the atmosphere by the mechanism of sea ice advection. To adequately represent these important interactions in the coupled system atmosphereâcryosphereâocean, both the dynamics and the thermodynamics of sea ice must be included in climate models
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