Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet

The Antarctic Ice Sheet comprises the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and the much larger East Antarctic Ice Sheet. Fast flowing ice streams and outlet glaciers are important dynamic components of the ice sheet system, and a grid resolution of at least 20 km is required to identify many of these areas. Pre...

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Main Authors: Takeda, Andrea, Cox, Simon, Payne, Antony J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/1/take_02.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:21950 2023-07-30T03:57:40+02:00 Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet Takeda, Andrea Cox, Simon Payne, Antony J. 2002 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/1/take_02.pdf en eng https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/1/take_02.pdf Takeda, Andrea, Cox, Simon and Payne, Antony J. (2002) Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet. Computers & Geosciences, 28 (6), 723-734. (doi:10.1016/S0098-3004(01)00106-6 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0098-3004(01)00106-6>). cc_by_nc_nd_4 Article PeerReviewed 2002 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T20:37:25Z The Antarctic Ice Sheet comprises the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and the much larger East Antarctic Ice Sheet. Fast flowing ice streams and outlet glaciers are important dynamic components of the ice sheet system, and a grid resolution of at least 20 km is required to identify many of these areas. Previous fine resolution numerical models have focussed on ice flow in West Antarctica or on fine resolution modelling of subsections of the ice sheet, since the size of East Antarctica has generally precluded studies of the whole ice sheet at a resolution adequate to identify complex flow features. The equations describing ice flow are highly non-linear, making this a computationally intensive problem. We use a staggered grid for calculation of ice diffusivity to overcome numerical instability, and a sparse packing scheme to take account of the irregular boundary of Antarctica. We have developed an efficient parallel temperature-dependent ice flow model of the entire grounded portion of the Antarctic Ice Sheet at a resolution of 20 km. The model was primarily written to run on a commodity cluster of workstations, and performance results for this and other systems are presented. Ice flow patterns at steady state compare well with recently published balance velocity calculations. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica East Antarctica Ice Sheet West Antarctica University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Antarctic East Antarctic Ice Sheet East Antarctica The Antarctic West Antarctic Ice Sheet West Antarctica
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description The Antarctic Ice Sheet comprises the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and the much larger East Antarctic Ice Sheet. Fast flowing ice streams and outlet glaciers are important dynamic components of the ice sheet system, and a grid resolution of at least 20 km is required to identify many of these areas. Previous fine resolution numerical models have focussed on ice flow in West Antarctica or on fine resolution modelling of subsections of the ice sheet, since the size of East Antarctica has generally precluded studies of the whole ice sheet at a resolution adequate to identify complex flow features. The equations describing ice flow are highly non-linear, making this a computationally intensive problem. We use a staggered grid for calculation of ice diffusivity to overcome numerical instability, and a sparse packing scheme to take account of the irregular boundary of Antarctica. We have developed an efficient parallel temperature-dependent ice flow model of the entire grounded portion of the Antarctic Ice Sheet at a resolution of 20 km. The model was primarily written to run on a commodity cluster of workstations, and performance results for this and other systems are presented. Ice flow patterns at steady state compare well with recently published balance velocity calculations.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Takeda, Andrea
Cox, Simon
Payne, Antony J.
spellingShingle Takeda, Andrea
Cox, Simon
Payne, Antony J.
Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet
author_facet Takeda, Andrea
Cox, Simon
Payne, Antony J.
author_sort Takeda, Andrea
title Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet
title_short Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet
title_full Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet
title_fullStr Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet
title_full_unstemmed Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet
title_sort parallel numerical modelling of the antarctic ice sheet
publishDate 2002
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/1/take_02.pdf
geographic Antarctic
East Antarctic Ice Sheet
East Antarctica
The Antarctic
West Antarctic Ice Sheet
West Antarctica
geographic_facet Antarctic
East Antarctic Ice Sheet
East Antarctica
The Antarctic
West Antarctic Ice Sheet
West Antarctica
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Ice Sheet
West Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Ice Sheet
West Antarctica
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/21950/1/take_02.pdf
Takeda, Andrea, Cox, Simon and Payne, Antony J. (2002) Parallel numerical modelling of the Antarctic Ice Sheet. Computers & Geosciences, 28 (6), 723-734. (doi:10.1016/S0098-3004(01)00106-6 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0098-3004(01)00106-6>).
op_rights cc_by_nc_nd_4
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