Marine ice sheet model performance depends on basal sliding physics and sub-shelf melting ...

Computer models are necessary for understanding and predicting marine ice sheet behaviour. However, there is uncertainty over implementation of physical processes at the ice base, both for grounded and floating glacial ice. Here we implement several sliding relations in a marine ice sheet flow-line...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gladstone, Rupert M., Warner, Roland C., Galton-Fenzi, Benjamin K., Gagliardini, Olivier, Zwinger, Thomas, Greve, Ralf
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: ETH Zurich 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000128602
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11850/128602
Description
Summary:Computer models are necessary for understanding and predicting marine ice sheet behaviour. However, there is uncertainty over implementation of physical processes at the ice base, both for grounded and floating glacial ice. Here we implement several sliding relations in a marine ice sheet flow-line model accounting for all stress components and demonstrate that model resolution requirements are strongly dependent on both the choice of basal sliding relation and the spatial distribution of ice shelf basal melting. Sliding relations that reduce the magnitude of the step change in basal drag from grounded ice to floating ice (where basal drag is set to zero) show reduced dependence on resolution compared to a commonly used relation, in which basal drag is purely a power law function of basal ice velocity. Sliding relations in which basal drag goes smoothly to zero as the grounding line is approached from inland (due to a physically motivated incorporation of effective pressure at the bed) provide further ... : The Cryosphere, 11 (1) ...