Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets

This thesis studies the scattering properties of different types of imperfections in large Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets. Such irregularities include cracks, pressure ridges and both open and refrozen leads. The scattering by a transition region between sea ice and a very thick ice shelf, for exam...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Williams , Timothy D.C.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Otago 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10523/8154
id ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/8154
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/8154 2023-05-15T13:52:08+02:00 Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets Williams , Timothy D.C. 2018-07-03T02:41:58Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10523/8154 en eng University of Otago http://hdl.handle.net/10523/8154 Thesis or Dissertation 2018 ftunivotagoour 2022-05-11T19:20:30Z This thesis studies the scattering properties of different types of imperfections in large Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets. Such irregularities include cracks, pressure ridges and both open and refrozen leads. The scattering by a transition region between sea ice and a very thick ice shelf, for example as is found in the Ross Sea in Antarctica, is also treated. Methods of solution are based on applications of Green's theorem to the appropriate situation, which leads to either a single integral equation or a pair of coupled integral equations to be solved at the boundary between the ice and the sea water. Those equations over a finite interval are solved using numerical quadrature, while those over semi-infinite ranges are solved using the Wiener-Hopf method. Results calculated using different techniques are able to be checked against each other, giving us great confidence in their accuracy. In particular, the scattering by three ice sheets of different thicknesses is confirmed analytically by mode-matching coupled with the residue calculus technique. The scattering by the single irregularities is investigated partly for its own sake, and partly with the aim of using it to treat the scattering when large numbers of features are included in a single ice sheet. The principal objective of doing this is to observe the change in the general amounts of reflection and transmission as the background ice thickness is changed. There is enough variation in our results for us to conclude that there is definite potential for using the change in an incident wave spectrum after passing through a given ice field to estimate the background ice thickness. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Arctic Ice Sheet Ice Shelf Ross Sea Sea ice University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive) Antarctic Arctic Ross Sea
institution Open Polar
collection University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive)
op_collection_id ftunivotagoour
language English
description This thesis studies the scattering properties of different types of imperfections in large Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets. Such irregularities include cracks, pressure ridges and both open and refrozen leads. The scattering by a transition region between sea ice and a very thick ice shelf, for example as is found in the Ross Sea in Antarctica, is also treated. Methods of solution are based on applications of Green's theorem to the appropriate situation, which leads to either a single integral equation or a pair of coupled integral equations to be solved at the boundary between the ice and the sea water. Those equations over a finite interval are solved using numerical quadrature, while those over semi-infinite ranges are solved using the Wiener-Hopf method. Results calculated using different techniques are able to be checked against each other, giving us great confidence in their accuracy. In particular, the scattering by three ice sheets of different thicknesses is confirmed analytically by mode-matching coupled with the residue calculus technique. The scattering by the single irregularities is investigated partly for its own sake, and partly with the aim of using it to treat the scattering when large numbers of features are included in a single ice sheet. The principal objective of doing this is to observe the change in the general amounts of reflection and transmission as the background ice thickness is changed. There is enough variation in our results for us to conclude that there is definite potential for using the change in an incident wave spectrum after passing through a given ice field to estimate the background ice thickness.
format Thesis
author Williams , Timothy D.C.
spellingShingle Williams , Timothy D.C.
Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets
author_facet Williams , Timothy D.C.
author_sort Williams , Timothy D.C.
title Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets
title_short Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets
title_full Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets
title_fullStr Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets
title_full_unstemmed Reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets
title_sort reflections on ice : scattering of flexural gravity waves by irregularities in arctic and antarctic ice sheets
publisher University of Otago
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10523/8154
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
Ross Sea
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
Ross Sea
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ross Sea
Sea ice
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ross Sea
Sea ice
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10523/8154
_version_ 1766256391961444352