Sea Ice Rheology Experiment (SIREx): 1. Scaling and Statistical Properties of Sea‐Ice Deformation Fields

As the sea‐ice modeling community is shifting to advanced numerical frameworks, developing new sea‐ice rheologies, and increasing model spatial resolution, ubiquitous deformation features in the Arctic sea ice are now being resolved by sea‐ice models. Initiated at the Forum for Arctic Modeling and O...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geophysical research. Oceans 2022-04, Vol.127 (4), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Bouchat, Amélie, Hutter, Nils, Chanut, Jérôme, Dupont, Frédéric, Dukhovskoy, Dmitry, Garric, Gilles, Lee, Younjoo J., Lemieux, Jean‐François, Lique, Camille, Losch, Martin, Maslowski, Wieslaw, Myers, Paul G., Ólason, Einar, Rampal, Pierre, Rasmussen, Till, Talandier, Claude, Tremblay, Bruno, Wang, Qiang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As the sea‐ice modeling community is shifting to advanced numerical frameworks, developing new sea‐ice rheologies, and increasing model spatial resolution, ubiquitous deformation features in the Arctic sea ice are now being resolved by sea‐ice models. Initiated at the Forum for Arctic Modeling and Observational Synthesis, the Sea Ice Rheology Experiment (SIREx) aims at evaluating state‐of‐the‐art sea‐ice models using existing and new metrics to understand how the simulated deformation fields are affected by different representations of sea‐ice physics (rheology) and by model configuration. Part 1 of the SIREx analysis is concerned with evaluation of the statistical distribution and scaling properties of sea‐ice deformation fields from 35 different simulations against those from the RADARSAT Geophysical Processor System (RGPS). For the first time, the viscous‐plastic (and the elastic‐viscous‐plastic variant), elastic‐anisotropic‐plastic, and Maxwell‐elasto‐brittle rheologies are compared in a single study. We find that both plastic and brittle sea‐ice rheologies have the potential to reproduce the observed RGPS deformation statistics, including multi‐fractality. Model configuration (e.g., numerical convergence, atmospheric representation, spatial resolution) and physical parameterizations (e.g., ice strength parameters and ice thickness distribution) both have effects as important as the choice of sea‐ice rheology on the deformation statistics. It is therefore not straightforward to attribute model performance to a specific rheological framework using current deformation metrics. In light of these results, we further evaluate the statistical properties of simulated Linear Kinematic Features in a SIREx Part 2 companion paper. Plain Language Summary The ice in the Arctic Ocean is not continuous: it is broken into individual pieces of ice (floes). As the winds and ocean currents continually move these ice floes, they get piled up together or pushed away from each other, forming regions of increased ice thickness (ridges) or regions of open water (leads). These leads and ridges (ice deformations) are important features of the Arctic pack ice because they control the amount of energy that can be exchanged between the atmosphere and the ocean. Current climate models cannot simulate individual ice floes and their deformations. Instead, various methods are used to represent the movement and deformation of the Arctic sea‐ice cover. The goal of the Sea Ice Rheology E
ISSN:2169-9275
2169-9291
DOI:10.1029/2021JC017667