Sea ice deformation and sea ice thickness change

The Arctic Ocean is undergoing a major transition from a year-round sea ice cover to ice-free summers with global consequences. Sea ice thickness is at the center of the ongoing changes because the thickness regulates key processes of the Arctic climate system and in the last six decades, the mean t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: von Albedyll, Luisa
Other Authors: Haas, Christian, Spreen, Gunnar
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Universität Bremen 2022
Subjects:
530
Online Access:https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/6306
https://doi.org/10.26092/elib/1868
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-elib63063
Description
Summary:The Arctic Ocean is undergoing a major transition from a year-round sea ice cover to ice-free summers with global consequences. Sea ice thickness is at the center of the ongoing changes because the thickness regulates key processes of the Arctic climate system and in the last six decades, the mean thickness has more than halved. With the most scientific attention on the increased melting and delayed freezing of Arctic sea ice, dynamic thickness change caused by sea ice deformation has remained less studied. Dynamic thickness change alters the sea ice thickness through colliding floes that raft or form pressure ridges or floes breaking apart resulting in leads. Because sea ice grows faster in open water and under thin ice, new ice formation is enhanced in those leads compared to the surrounding ice during the growth season. Because thinner ice is easier to break and move, the ongoing thinning of Arctic sea ice may result in more ridges and leads, which, in turn, could increase ice thickness in winter. However, our limited quantitative understanding of dynamic thickness change has hampered any robust prediction if and to which extent such increased dynamic thickening in winter could mitigate summer thinning in the warming Arctic. To address this gap, we need more robust estimates of the current magnitude as well as a better understanding and representation of the different processes in state-of-the-art sea ice models. Thus, the overarching goal of this thesis is to resolve and quantify dynamic thickness change and to link it to the corresponding sea ice deformation. I focus on the freezing period addressing the following research questions: (1) How large is the dynamic contribution to the mean sea ice thickness in different dynamic regimes? (2) How is deformation shaping the ice thickness distribution? (3) How can high-resolution microwave synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite data be used to estimate dynamic thickness change? I answer them in two regional case studies: a unique month-long deformation event ...