Effects of Ice-Microstructure-Based Inherent Optical Properties Parameterization in the CICE Model

The constant inherent optical properties (IOPs) for sea ice currently applied in sea ice models do not realistically represent the dividing of shortwave radiative fluxes in sea ice and the ocean below it. Here we implement a parameterization of variable IOPs based on ice microstructures in the Los A...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Remote Sensing
Main Authors: Yiming Zhang, Jiping Liu
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024
Subjects:
Q
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16091494
https://doaj.org/article/1e32a2c1b2a440d2815ed486b39d71a6
Description
Summary:The constant inherent optical properties (IOPs) for sea ice currently applied in sea ice models do not realistically represent the dividing of shortwave radiative fluxes in sea ice and the ocean below it. Here we implement a parameterization of variable IOPs based on ice microstructures in the Los Alamos sea ice model, version 6.0 (CICE6) and investigate its effects on the simulation of the dividing of shortwave radiation and sea ice in the Arctic. Our sensitivity experiments indicate that variable IOP parameterization results in strong seasonal variation for the IOP parameters, typically reaching the seasonal maximum in the boreal summer. With such large differences, variable IOP parameterization leads to increased absorbed solar radiation at the surface and in the interior of Arctic sea ice relative to constant IOPs, up to ~3 W/m 2 , but decreased solar radiation penetrating into the ocean, up to ~5–6 W/m 2 . The changes in the dividing of shortwave fluxes in sea ice and the ocean below it induced by the variable IOPs have significant influence on Arctic sea ice thickness by modulating surface and bottom melting and frazil ice formation (increasing surface melting by ~16% and reducing bottom melting by ~11% in summer).