Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change

During the last decade, significant progress has been made regarding the study of polar ice sheets and their interaction with the global climate system. This must to a large extent be due to the increased quantity of high-quality geophysical and glacial-geological observations. Equally important, ho...

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Main Author: Huybrechts, Philippe
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/7000/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.17545
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spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:7000 2023-09-05T13:12:36+02:00 Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change Huybrechts, Philippe 1998 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/7000/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.17545 unknown Huybrechts, P. (1998) Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change , SCAR/IASC International Symposium on Polar Aspects of Global Change, Tromsø (Norway)August 1998. . hdl:10013/epic.17545 EPIC3SCAR/IASC International Symposium on Polar Aspects of Global Change, Tromsø (Norway)August 1998., 24 Conference notRev 1998 ftawi 2023-08-22T19:46:28Z During the last decade, significant progress has been made regarding the study of polar ice sheets and their interaction with the global climate system. This must to a large extent be due to the increased quantity of high-quality geophysical and glacial-geological observations. Equally important, however, is the crucial role being played by numerical ice-sheet models to interprete and link all these various pieces of information. The present-day generation of large-scale three-dimensional ice sheet models typically operate on horizontal grids of 20 to 40 km, have between 10 and 30 layers in the vertical and solve the fully coupled thermomechanic ice-flow equations.The most performant of these models are applied to the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, and are being employed to both examine the present state of these ice sheets and their response to changes in environmental conditions on time scales ranging from their inception during the Tertiary, their behaviour during the Quaternary ice ages and their response to future climatic warming.Current developments concentrate on a better description of boundary conditions and the interaction with the atmosphere, lithosphere, and ocean. In terms of ice-sheet variations, the surface mass-balance is often the most critical boundary condition, and here a lot is expected from combining ice-sheet models with General Circulation Models and more sophisticated mass-balance models in one or other way.During the talk, an overview will be given of the structure and physical basis of these ice-sheet models and of the type of problems which are addressed by them. Examples will be discussed of simulations of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets during the glacial cycles and of predictions of their future behaviour due to anthropogenic climatic change. This will be done within the context of the cryospheric contribution to global sea level changes. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Greenland Ice Sheet Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center) Antarctic Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description During the last decade, significant progress has been made regarding the study of polar ice sheets and their interaction with the global climate system. This must to a large extent be due to the increased quantity of high-quality geophysical and glacial-geological observations. Equally important, however, is the crucial role being played by numerical ice-sheet models to interprete and link all these various pieces of information. The present-day generation of large-scale three-dimensional ice sheet models typically operate on horizontal grids of 20 to 40 km, have between 10 and 30 layers in the vertical and solve the fully coupled thermomechanic ice-flow equations.The most performant of these models are applied to the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, and are being employed to both examine the present state of these ice sheets and their response to changes in environmental conditions on time scales ranging from their inception during the Tertiary, their behaviour during the Quaternary ice ages and their response to future climatic warming.Current developments concentrate on a better description of boundary conditions and the interaction with the atmosphere, lithosphere, and ocean. In terms of ice-sheet variations, the surface mass-balance is often the most critical boundary condition, and here a lot is expected from combining ice-sheet models with General Circulation Models and more sophisticated mass-balance models in one or other way.During the talk, an overview will be given of the structure and physical basis of these ice-sheet models and of the type of problems which are addressed by them. Examples will be discussed of simulations of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets during the glacial cycles and of predictions of their future behaviour due to anthropogenic climatic change. This will be done within the context of the cryospheric contribution to global sea level changes.
format Conference Object
author Huybrechts, Philippe
spellingShingle Huybrechts, Philippe
Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change
author_facet Huybrechts, Philippe
author_sort Huybrechts, Philippe
title Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change
title_short Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change
title_full Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change
title_fullStr Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change
title_full_unstemmed Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change
title_sort modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change
publishDate 1998
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/7000/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.17545
geographic Antarctic
Greenland
geographic_facet Antarctic
Greenland
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Greenland
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Greenland
Ice Sheet
op_source EPIC3SCAR/IASC International Symposium on Polar Aspects of Global Change, Tromsø (Norway)August 1998., 24
op_relation Huybrechts, P. (1998) Modeling the response of polar ice sheets to climatic change , SCAR/IASC International Symposium on Polar Aspects of Global Change, Tromsø (Norway)August 1998. . hdl:10013/epic.17545
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