Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves

Physical processes in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are of great importance to the global climate system. This thesis considers two such processes, namely ice- ocean interaction in ice shelf basal crevasses and the conditional instability of frazil ice growth. It has been suggested that freezing...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jordan, James
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Imperial College London 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25560/28616
http://spiral.imperial.ac.uk/handle/10044/1/28616
id ftdatacite:10.25560/28616
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.25560/28616 2023-05-15T13:43:52+02:00 Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves Jordan, James 2014 https://dx.doi.org/10.25560/28616 http://spiral.imperial.ac.uk/handle/10044/1/28616 unknown Imperial College London Text ScholarlyArticle article-journal Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) 2014 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25560/28616 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Physical processes in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are of great importance to the global climate system. This thesis considers two such processes, namely ice- ocean interaction in ice shelf basal crevasses and the conditional instability of frazil ice growth. It has been suggested that freezing within basal crevasses can act as a stabilising in uence on ice shelves, preventing their break up. Using Fluidity, a nite element ocean model, it is found that ocean circulation within a crevasse is highly dependent upon the amount of freezing in the crevasse. It is also found that frazil ice formation is responsible for the vast majority of freezing within a crevasse, and that there is a non linear relationship between the amount of supercooling in a crevasse and its freeze rate. The conditional instability of frazil ice growth is a little investigated mechanism of ice growth. Any frazil forming in the water column reduces the bulk density of a parcel of frazil-seawater mixture, causing it to rise. Due to the pressure-decrease in the freezing point, this causes more frazil to form, causing the parcel to accelerate, and so on. Numerical modelling nds that the instability does not operate in the presence of strong strati cation, high thermal driving (warm water), a small initial perturbation, high `background' mixing or the prevalence of large frazil ice crystals. Given a large enough initial perturbation this instability could allow signi cant rates of ice growth even in water that is above the freezing point. The research presented in this thesis forms the material for two peer-reviewed publi- cations; `Modelling ice ocean interactions in ice shelf basal crevasses' (Jordan et al., 2014) and `On the conditional frazil ice instability in seawater' (Jordan et al., 2015) Text Antarc* Antarctica Ice Shelf Ice Shelves Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description Physical processes in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are of great importance to the global climate system. This thesis considers two such processes, namely ice- ocean interaction in ice shelf basal crevasses and the conditional instability of frazil ice growth. It has been suggested that freezing within basal crevasses can act as a stabilising in uence on ice shelves, preventing their break up. Using Fluidity, a nite element ocean model, it is found that ocean circulation within a crevasse is highly dependent upon the amount of freezing in the crevasse. It is also found that frazil ice formation is responsible for the vast majority of freezing within a crevasse, and that there is a non linear relationship between the amount of supercooling in a crevasse and its freeze rate. The conditional instability of frazil ice growth is a little investigated mechanism of ice growth. Any frazil forming in the water column reduces the bulk density of a parcel of frazil-seawater mixture, causing it to rise. Due to the pressure-decrease in the freezing point, this causes more frazil to form, causing the parcel to accelerate, and so on. Numerical modelling nds that the instability does not operate in the presence of strong strati cation, high thermal driving (warm water), a small initial perturbation, high `background' mixing or the prevalence of large frazil ice crystals. Given a large enough initial perturbation this instability could allow signi cant rates of ice growth even in water that is above the freezing point. The research presented in this thesis forms the material for two peer-reviewed publi- cations; `Modelling ice ocean interactions in ice shelf basal crevasses' (Jordan et al., 2014) and `On the conditional frazil ice instability in seawater' (Jordan et al., 2015)
format Text
author Jordan, James
spellingShingle Jordan, James
Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves
author_facet Jordan, James
author_sort Jordan, James
title Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves
title_short Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves
title_full Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves
title_fullStr Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves
title_full_unstemmed Modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves
title_sort modelling ice-ocean interactions in and around ice shelves
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2014
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25560/28616
http://spiral.imperial.ac.uk/handle/10044/1/28616
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Southern Ocean
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25560/28616
_version_ 1766194621459726336