Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope

As a result of the coupling effects of longitudinal stress gradients, the perturbations Δu in glacier-flow velocity that result from longitudinally varying perturbations in ice thickness Δh and surface slope Δɑ are determined by a weighted longitudinal average of ФhΔh and Ф_ɑΔɑ, where Фh and Ф_ɑ are...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Echelmeyer, Keith A., Kamb, Barclay
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: International Glaciological Society 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/
https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/1/Kamb_1986p285.pdf
https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20140915-094200202
id ftcaltechauth:oai:authors.library.caltech.edu:49694
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcaltechauth:oai:authors.library.caltech.edu:49694 2023-05-15T16:57:39+02:00 Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope Echelmeyer, Keith A. Kamb, Barclay 1986 application/pdf https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/ https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/1/Kamb_1986p285.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20140915-094200202 unknown International Glaciological Society https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/1/Kamb_1986p285.pdf Echelmeyer, Keith A. and Kamb, Barclay (1986) Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope. Journal of Glaciology, 32 (111). pp. 285-298. ISSN 0022-1430. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20140915-094200202 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20140915-094200202> Article PeerReviewed 1986 ftcaltechauth 2020-04-26T16:47:33Z As a result of the coupling effects of longitudinal stress gradients, the perturbations Δu in glacier-flow velocity that result from longitudinally varying perturbations in ice thickness Δh and surface slope Δɑ are determined by a weighted longitudinal average of ФhΔh and Ф_ɑΔɑ, where Фh and Ф_ɑ are "influence coefficients" that control the size of the contributions made by local Δh and Δɑ to the flow increment in the longitudinal average. The values of Ф_h and Ф_ɑ depend on effects of longitudinal stress and velocity gradients in the unperturbed datum state. If the datum state is an inclined slab in simple-shear flow, the longitudinal averaging solution for the flow perturbation is essentially that obtained previously (Kamb and Echelmeyer, 1985) with equivalent values for the longitudinal coupling length ℓ and with Ф_h = n + l and Ф_ɑ + n, where n is the flow-law exponent. Calculation of the influence coefficients from flow data for Blue Glacier, Washington, indicates that in practice Ф_ɑ differs little from n, whereas Ф_h can differ considerably from n + 1. The weighting function in the longitudinal averaging integral, which is the Green's function for the longitudinal coupling equation for flow perturbations, can be approximated by an asymmetric exponential, whose asymmetry depends on two "asymmetry parameters" µ and σ, where µ is the longitudinal gradient of ℓ(= dℓ/dx). The asymmetric exponential has different coupling lengths ℓ_+ and ℓ_ for the influences from up-stream and from down-stream on a given point of observation. If σ/µ is in the range 1.5-2.2, as expected for flow perturbations in glaciers or ice sheets in which the ice flux is not a strongly varying function of the longitudinal coordinate x, then, when dℓ/dx > 0, the down-stream coupling length ℓ_+ is longer than the up-stream coupling length ℓ_ and vice versa when dℓ/dx < 0. Flow thickness- and slope-perturbation data for Blue Glacier, obtained by comparing the glacier in 1957-58 and 1977-78, require longitudinal averaging for reasonable interpretation. Analyzed on the basis of the longitudinal coupling theory, with 4ℓ + 1.6 km up-stream, decreasing toward the terminus, the data indicate n to be about 2.5, if interpreted on the basis of a response factor ψ + 0.85 derived theoretically by Echelmeyer (unpublished) for the flow response to thickness perturbations in a channel of finite width. The data contain an apparent indication that the flow response to slope perturbations is distinctly smaller, in relation to the response to thickness perturbations, than is expected on a theoretical basis (i.e. Ф_ɑ/Ф_h + n/(n + 1) for a slab). This probably indicates that the effective ℓ is longer than can be tested directly with the available data set owing to its limited range in x. Article in Journal/Newspaper Journal of Glaciology Caltech Authors (California Institute of Technology) Blue Glacier ENVELOPE(164.167,164.167,-77.833,-77.833)
institution Open Polar
collection Caltech Authors (California Institute of Technology)
op_collection_id ftcaltechauth
language unknown
description As a result of the coupling effects of longitudinal stress gradients, the perturbations Δu in glacier-flow velocity that result from longitudinally varying perturbations in ice thickness Δh and surface slope Δɑ are determined by a weighted longitudinal average of ФhΔh and Ф_ɑΔɑ, where Фh and Ф_ɑ are "influence coefficients" that control the size of the contributions made by local Δh and Δɑ to the flow increment in the longitudinal average. The values of Ф_h and Ф_ɑ depend on effects of longitudinal stress and velocity gradients in the unperturbed datum state. If the datum state is an inclined slab in simple-shear flow, the longitudinal averaging solution for the flow perturbation is essentially that obtained previously (Kamb and Echelmeyer, 1985) with equivalent values for the longitudinal coupling length ℓ and with Ф_h = n + l and Ф_ɑ + n, where n is the flow-law exponent. Calculation of the influence coefficients from flow data for Blue Glacier, Washington, indicates that in practice Ф_ɑ differs little from n, whereas Ф_h can differ considerably from n + 1. The weighting function in the longitudinal averaging integral, which is the Green's function for the longitudinal coupling equation for flow perturbations, can be approximated by an asymmetric exponential, whose asymmetry depends on two "asymmetry parameters" µ and σ, where µ is the longitudinal gradient of ℓ(= dℓ/dx). The asymmetric exponential has different coupling lengths ℓ_+ and ℓ_ for the influences from up-stream and from down-stream on a given point of observation. If σ/µ is in the range 1.5-2.2, as expected for flow perturbations in glaciers or ice sheets in which the ice flux is not a strongly varying function of the longitudinal coordinate x, then, when dℓ/dx > 0, the down-stream coupling length ℓ_+ is longer than the up-stream coupling length ℓ_ and vice versa when dℓ/dx < 0. Flow thickness- and slope-perturbation data for Blue Glacier, obtained by comparing the glacier in 1957-58 and 1977-78, require longitudinal averaging for reasonable interpretation. Analyzed on the basis of the longitudinal coupling theory, with 4ℓ + 1.6 km up-stream, decreasing toward the terminus, the data indicate n to be about 2.5, if interpreted on the basis of a response factor ψ + 0.85 derived theoretically by Echelmeyer (unpublished) for the flow response to thickness perturbations in a channel of finite width. The data contain an apparent indication that the flow response to slope perturbations is distinctly smaller, in relation to the response to thickness perturbations, than is expected on a theoretical basis (i.e. Ф_ɑ/Ф_h + n/(n + 1) for a slab). This probably indicates that the effective ℓ is longer than can be tested directly with the available data set owing to its limited range in x.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Echelmeyer, Keith A.
Kamb, Barclay
spellingShingle Echelmeyer, Keith A.
Kamb, Barclay
Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope
author_facet Echelmeyer, Keith A.
Kamb, Barclay
author_sort Echelmeyer, Keith A.
title Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope
title_short Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope
title_full Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope
title_fullStr Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope
title_full_unstemmed Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope
title_sort stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: ii. longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope
publisher International Glaciological Society
publishDate 1986
url https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/
https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/1/Kamb_1986p285.pdf
https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20140915-094200202
long_lat ENVELOPE(164.167,164.167,-77.833,-77.833)
geographic Blue Glacier
geographic_facet Blue Glacier
genre Journal of Glaciology
genre_facet Journal of Glaciology
op_relation https://authors.library.caltech.edu/49694/1/Kamb_1986p285.pdf
Echelmeyer, Keith A. and Kamb, Barclay (1986) Stress-gradient coupling in glacier flow: II. Longitudinal averaging of the flow response to small perturbations in ice thickness and surface slope. Journal of Glaciology, 32 (111). pp. 285-298. ISSN 0022-1430. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20140915-094200202 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20140915-094200202>
_version_ 1766049212402761728