Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice

Polar sea ice is a critical component of Earth’s climate system. As a material it is a multiscale composite with temperature dependent millimeter-scale brine microstructure, and centimeter-scale polycrystalline microstructure which is largely determined by how the ice was formed. The surface layer o...

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Main Authors: Golden, Kenneth M., Murphy, N. Benjamin, Cherkaev, Elena
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2022-17
https://npg.copernicus.org/preprints/npg-2022-17/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:npgd107837 2023-05-15T18:16:53+02:00 Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice Golden, Kenneth M. Murphy, N. Benjamin Cherkaev, Elena 2022-12-19 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2022-17 https://npg.copernicus.org/preprints/npg-2022-17/ eng eng doi:10.5194/npg-2022-17 https://npg.copernicus.org/preprints/npg-2022-17/ eISSN: 1607-7946 Text 2022 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2022-17 2022-12-26T17:22:43Z Polar sea ice is a critical component of Earth’s climate system. As a material it is a multiscale composite with temperature dependent millimeter-scale brine microstructure, and centimeter-scale polycrystalline microstructure which is largely determined by how the ice was formed. The surface layer of the polar oceans can be viewed as a granular composite of ice floes in a sea water host, with floe sizes ranging from centimeters to tens of kilometers. A principal challenge in modeling sea ice and its role in climate is how to use information on smaller scale structure to find the effective or homogenized properties on larger scales relevant to process studies and coarse-grained climate models. That is, how do you predict macroscopic behavior from microscopic laws, like in statistical mechanics and solid state physics? Also of great interest in climate science is the inverse problem of recovering parameters controlling small scale processes from large scale observations. Motivated by sea ice remote sensing, the analytic continuation method for obtaining rigorous bounds on the homogenized coefficients of two phase composites was applied to the complex permittivity of sea ice, which is a Stieltjes function of the ratio of the permittivities of ice and brine. Integral representations for the effective parameters distill the complexities of the composite microgeometry into the spectral properties of a self-adjoint operator like the Hamiltonian in quantum physics. These techniques have been extended to polycrystalline materials, advection diffusion processes, and ocean waves in the sea ice cover. Here we discuss this powerful approach in homogenization, highlighting the spectral representations and resolvent structure of the fields that are shared by the two component theory and its extensions. Spectral analysis of sea ice structures leads to a random matrix theory picture of percolation processes in composites, establishing parallels to Anderson localization and semiconductor physics, which then provides new insights ... Text Sea ice Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description Polar sea ice is a critical component of Earth’s climate system. As a material it is a multiscale composite with temperature dependent millimeter-scale brine microstructure, and centimeter-scale polycrystalline microstructure which is largely determined by how the ice was formed. The surface layer of the polar oceans can be viewed as a granular composite of ice floes in a sea water host, with floe sizes ranging from centimeters to tens of kilometers. A principal challenge in modeling sea ice and its role in climate is how to use information on smaller scale structure to find the effective or homogenized properties on larger scales relevant to process studies and coarse-grained climate models. That is, how do you predict macroscopic behavior from microscopic laws, like in statistical mechanics and solid state physics? Also of great interest in climate science is the inverse problem of recovering parameters controlling small scale processes from large scale observations. Motivated by sea ice remote sensing, the analytic continuation method for obtaining rigorous bounds on the homogenized coefficients of two phase composites was applied to the complex permittivity of sea ice, which is a Stieltjes function of the ratio of the permittivities of ice and brine. Integral representations for the effective parameters distill the complexities of the composite microgeometry into the spectral properties of a self-adjoint operator like the Hamiltonian in quantum physics. These techniques have been extended to polycrystalline materials, advection diffusion processes, and ocean waves in the sea ice cover. Here we discuss this powerful approach in homogenization, highlighting the spectral representations and resolvent structure of the fields that are shared by the two component theory and its extensions. Spectral analysis of sea ice structures leads to a random matrix theory picture of percolation processes in composites, establishing parallels to Anderson localization and semiconductor physics, which then provides new insights ...
format Text
author Golden, Kenneth M.
Murphy, N. Benjamin
Cherkaev, Elena
spellingShingle Golden, Kenneth M.
Murphy, N. Benjamin
Cherkaev, Elena
Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice
author_facet Golden, Kenneth M.
Murphy, N. Benjamin
Cherkaev, Elena
author_sort Golden, Kenneth M.
title Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice
title_short Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice
title_full Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice
title_fullStr Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice
title_full_unstemmed Stieltjes Functions and Spectral Analysis in the Physics of Sea Ice
title_sort stieltjes functions and spectral analysis in the physics of sea ice
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2022-17
https://npg.copernicus.org/preprints/npg-2022-17/
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_source eISSN: 1607-7946
op_relation doi:10.5194/npg-2022-17
https://npg.copernicus.org/preprints/npg-2022-17/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2022-17
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