A climatology of thermodynamic vs. dynamic Arctic wintertime sea ice thickness effects during the CryoSat-2 era

Thermodynamic and dynamic sea ice thickness processes are affected by differing mechanisms in a changing climate. Independent observational datasets of each are essential for model validation and accurate projections of future sea ice conditions. Here we present the first long-term, sub-seasonal tem...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anheuser, James, Liu, Yinghui, Key, Jeffrey R.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-2022-218
https://tc.copernicus.org/preprints/tc-2022-218/
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Summary:Thermodynamic and dynamic sea ice thickness processes are affected by differing mechanisms in a changing climate. Independent observational datasets of each are essential for model validation and accurate projections of future sea ice conditions. Here we present the first long-term, sub-seasonal temporal resolution, basin-wide and Eulerian climatology of dynamically and thermodynamically driven sea ice thickness effects across the Arctic. Basin-wide estimates of thermodynamic growth rate are determined by coupling passive microwave retrieved snow–ice interface temperatures to a simple sea ice thermodynamic model, total growth is calculated from weekly Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) CS2SMOS sea ice thickness spanning fall 2010 through spring 2021, and the dynamics component is calculated as their difference. The dynamic effects are further separated into advection and deformation effects using a sea ice motion dataset. Thermodynamic growth varies from less than 0.04 m wk -1 in the central Arctic to greater than 0.08 m wk -1 in the seasonal ice zones. High positive dynamic effects of greater than 0.04 m wk -1 , as high as twice that of thermodynamic growth, are found north of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago where the Transpolar Drift and Beaufort Gyre deposit ice. Strong negative dynamic effects of greater than 0.08 m wk -1 are found where the Transpolar Drift originates, nearly equal to thermodynamic effects in these regions. Yearly results from the winter of 2019–2020 compare well with a recent study of the dynamic and thermodynamic effects on sea ice thickness along the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) drift track during the winter of 2019–2020. Couplets of deformation and advection effects with opposite sign are common across the Arctic, with positive advection effects and negative deformation effects found in the Beaufort Sea and negative advection effects and positive deformation effects found in most other regions. The seasonal cycle shows deformation effect ...