Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study

The importance of leads, sea ice motion, and frazil ice on the wintertime ocean Boundary layer was examined by using a large-eddy simulation turbulence model coupled to a thermodynamic slab ice model. Coupling was achieved through exchange coefficients that accounted for the differing diffusion rate...

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Main Authors: Skyllingstad, Eric D., Denbo, Donald W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
unknown
Published: American Geophysical Union
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/s1784n14n
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:s1784n14n 2024-09-15T18:34:55+00:00 Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study Skyllingstad, Eric D. Denbo, Donald W. https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/s1784n14n English [eng] eng unknown American Geophysical Union https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/s1784n14n Copyright Not Evaluated Article ftoregonstate 2024-07-22T18:06:04Z The importance of leads, sea ice motion, and frazil ice on the wintertime ocean Boundary layer was examined by using a large-eddy simulation turbulence model coupled to a thermodynamic slab ice model. Coupling was achieved through exchange coefficients that accounted for the differing diffusion rates of heat and salinity. Frazil ice concentrations were modeled by using an ice crystal parameterization with constant crystal size and shape. Stationary ice without leads produced cellular structures similar to atmospheric convection without winds. Ice motion caused this pattern to break down into a series of streaks aligned with the flow. Eddy fluxes were strongly affected by ice motion with relatively larger entrainment fluxes at the mixed layer base under moving ice, whereas stationary ice produced larger fluxes near the top of the boundary layer. Opening of leads caused significant changes in the turbulent structure of the boundary layer. Leads in stationary ice produced concentrated plumes of higher-salinity water beneath the lead. Ice motion caused the lead convection to follow preexisting convective rolls, enhancing the roll circulation salinity and vertical velocity under the lead. Comparison of model time series data with observations from the Arctic Leads Experiment showed general agreement for both pack ice and lead conditions. Simulated heat flux carried by frazil ice had a prominent role in the upper boundary layer, suggesting that frazil ice is important in the heat budget of ice-covered oceans. Article in Journal/Newspaper Sea ice ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description The importance of leads, sea ice motion, and frazil ice on the wintertime ocean Boundary layer was examined by using a large-eddy simulation turbulence model coupled to a thermodynamic slab ice model. Coupling was achieved through exchange coefficients that accounted for the differing diffusion rates of heat and salinity. Frazil ice concentrations were modeled by using an ice crystal parameterization with constant crystal size and shape. Stationary ice without leads produced cellular structures similar to atmospheric convection without winds. Ice motion caused this pattern to break down into a series of streaks aligned with the flow. Eddy fluxes were strongly affected by ice motion with relatively larger entrainment fluxes at the mixed layer base under moving ice, whereas stationary ice produced larger fluxes near the top of the boundary layer. Opening of leads caused significant changes in the turbulent structure of the boundary layer. Leads in stationary ice produced concentrated plumes of higher-salinity water beneath the lead. Ice motion caused the lead convection to follow preexisting convective rolls, enhancing the roll circulation salinity and vertical velocity under the lead. Comparison of model time series data with observations from the Arctic Leads Experiment showed general agreement for both pack ice and lead conditions. Simulated heat flux carried by frazil ice had a prominent role in the upper boundary layer, suggesting that frazil ice is important in the heat budget of ice-covered oceans.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Skyllingstad, Eric D.
Denbo, Donald W.
spellingShingle Skyllingstad, Eric D.
Denbo, Donald W.
Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study
author_facet Skyllingstad, Eric D.
Denbo, Donald W.
author_sort Skyllingstad, Eric D.
title Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study
title_short Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study
title_full Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study
title_fullStr Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study
title_full_unstemmed Turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study
title_sort turbulence beneath sea ice and leads: a coupled sea ice/large-eddy simulation study
publisher American Geophysical Union
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/s1784n14n
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/s1784n14n
op_rights Copyright Not Evaluated
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