Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution

Sea ice is a critical component of the polar climate system that is tightly coupled to the ocean and atmosphere. It is highly heterogeneous, composed of discrete floes which range in size across space and time. In this thesis, I use a combination of modelling and observational approaches to investig...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roach, Laetitia
Other Authors: Renwick, James, Dean, Samuel
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Victoria University of Wellington 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8094
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spelling ftvuwellington:oai:researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz:10063/8094 2023-08-15T12:37:12+02:00 Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution Roach, Laetitia Renwick, James Dean, Samuel 2019 http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8094 en eng Victoria University of Wellington http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8094 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/nz/ Creative Commons GNU GPL Sea ice Climate Modelling text Doctoral 2019 ftvuwellington 2023-07-25T17:28:46Z Sea ice is a critical component of the polar climate system that is tightly coupled to the ocean and atmosphere. It is highly heterogeneous, composed of discrete floes which range in size across space and time. In this thesis, I use a combination of modelling and observational approaches to investigate how different physical processes determine the distribution of sea ice floe sizes. I construct the first global model that simulates floe sizes arising from the interaction of different physical processes. Floe sizes are modified by lateral melt, lateral growth, freezing together of floes and wave-ice interactions. By grounding process descriptions in underlying physics, observations of individual processes can be used to constrain model parameters. In light of the sparseness of floe size observations, I developed a novel methodology to constrain previously-unobserved floe freezing processes from in-situ observations. Results from global coupled sea ice–ocean model simulations are used to quantify the relative impacts of different processes on spatial and seasonal variability in the floe size distribution, providing hypotheses that could be tested by observational campaigns in the future. Under transient historical forcing, the model suggests that the fragmentation of Arctic sea ice has significantly increased over the satellite era. I also seek to improve understanding of feedbacks between sea ice floe size and the polar climate system. A fragmented ice cover exposes more ice area on the sides of floes to the ocean than sheet ice, promoting lateral melt, which reduces surface albedo. Conducting a statistical analysis of current climate models shows that inclusion of a lateral melt parametrization improves simulation of sea ice concentration relative to observations. However, calculation of lateral melt using the model for prognostic simulation of the sub-grid-scale floe size distribution results in little or no enhancement of lateral melt at a hemispheric scale compared to a simple parametrization, although it is ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis albedo Arctic Sea ice Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive
op_collection_id ftvuwellington
language English
topic Sea ice
Climate
Modelling
spellingShingle Sea ice
Climate
Modelling
Roach, Laetitia
Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution
topic_facet Sea ice
Climate
Modelling
description Sea ice is a critical component of the polar climate system that is tightly coupled to the ocean and atmosphere. It is highly heterogeneous, composed of discrete floes which range in size across space and time. In this thesis, I use a combination of modelling and observational approaches to investigate how different physical processes determine the distribution of sea ice floe sizes. I construct the first global model that simulates floe sizes arising from the interaction of different physical processes. Floe sizes are modified by lateral melt, lateral growth, freezing together of floes and wave-ice interactions. By grounding process descriptions in underlying physics, observations of individual processes can be used to constrain model parameters. In light of the sparseness of floe size observations, I developed a novel methodology to constrain previously-unobserved floe freezing processes from in-situ observations. Results from global coupled sea ice–ocean model simulations are used to quantify the relative impacts of different processes on spatial and seasonal variability in the floe size distribution, providing hypotheses that could be tested by observational campaigns in the future. Under transient historical forcing, the model suggests that the fragmentation of Arctic sea ice has significantly increased over the satellite era. I also seek to improve understanding of feedbacks between sea ice floe size and the polar climate system. A fragmented ice cover exposes more ice area on the sides of floes to the ocean than sheet ice, promoting lateral melt, which reduces surface albedo. Conducting a statistical analysis of current climate models shows that inclusion of a lateral melt parametrization improves simulation of sea ice concentration relative to observations. However, calculation of lateral melt using the model for prognostic simulation of the sub-grid-scale floe size distribution results in little or no enhancement of lateral melt at a hemispheric scale compared to a simple parametrization, although it is ...
author2 Renwick, James
Dean, Samuel
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Roach, Laetitia
author_facet Roach, Laetitia
author_sort Roach, Laetitia
title Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution
title_short Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution
title_full Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution
title_fullStr Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution
title_full_unstemmed Advances in Understanding the Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution
title_sort advances in understanding the sea ice floe size distribution
publisher Victoria University of Wellington
publishDate 2019
url http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8094
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre albedo
Arctic
Sea ice
genre_facet albedo
Arctic
Sea ice
op_relation http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8094
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/nz/
Creative Commons GNU GPL
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