1 / 32

John M. Klinck, Y. Sinan Hüsrevoglu and Michael S. Dinniman

Imposed versus Dynamically Modeled Sea Ice: A ROMS study of the effects on polynyas and waters masses in the Ross Sea. John M. Klinck, Y. Sinan Hüsrevoglu and Michael S. Dinniman Center for Coastal Physical Oceanography Old Dominion University. Introduction.

dong
Download Presentation

John M. Klinck, Y. Sinan Hüsrevoglu and Michael S. Dinniman

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Imposed versus Dynamically Modeled Sea Ice:A ROMS study of the effects on polynyas and waters masses in the Ross Sea John M. Klinck, Y. Sinan Hüsrevoglu and Michael S. Dinniman Center for Coastal Physical Oceanography Old Dominion University

  2. Introduction Sea ice is important for ocean surface fluxes and water transformations at high latitude. Imposed sea ice is easier and has some accuracy. Atmosphere, ocean and ice can be inconsistent. Can not represent dynamics of polynyas or variation from observed conditions.

  3. Questions What is the sensitivity of dynamic sea ice to forcing and OBC? How realistic are sea ice results for the Ross Sea compared to observations? What is the influence of Terra Nova Bay Polynya on High Salinity Shelf Water?

  4. Model Overview • ROMS v2.1 primitive equation model • 5 km grid spacing • Includes silicate and nitrate with simplified uptake • Includes water under Ross Ice Shelf • Daily wind stress for years 2000 and 2001 • Surface fluxes from bulk formulae and surface atmospheric conditions • Imposed and dynamic (CICE) sea ice • Additional information by Mike Dinniman.

  5. Sea Ice Model • CICE V3.1 (Hunke and Dukowicz, 1997:2002) • 5 ice categories with 4 layers in each category (cat 4, 5 are rare). • One snow layer • Same grid as ocean model (  point is common) • Changed tiling and data structure to that of ROMS.

  6. Coupling • WRF I/O API MCT (V 2.0.1) Coupling Implementation (Weather Research and Forecasting) (Model Coupling Toolkit) • Loose Coupling (1 hr step) • Spherical Coordinate Remapping and Interpolation Package (SCRIP) from LANL to map between C-grid (ROMS) and B-grid (CICE) • Freezing/Melting potential calculated by ROMS (algorithm of CCSM, not Steele et al 1989) • CICE/CSIM data structure converted to ROMS tiling.

  7. Domain • Thin lines are isobaths • Shaded area is under Ross Ice Shelf • Black line is section for later figures

  8. Forcing • Atmospheric forcing from ECMWF. • Daily values of wind, air temp, pressure, humidity and clouds for 2000 and 2001. • Daily precipitation is from NCEP/NCAR reanalysis. • Added winds from Terra Nova Bay AWS at two points in ECMWF grid (called AWS case).

  9. Annual Average wind stress AWS ECMWF 2000 2001

  10. Open Boundaries • T and S specified by WOA 01 monthly climatology (radiation+adaptive nudging) • Integrated transport from OCCAM (radiation+adaptive nudging) • Radiation for baroclinic flow • Monthly SSM/I climatology for ice concentration on eastern boundary (imposed+nudging area) • Ice thickness is 30 cm for ECMWF and 50 cm for AWS

  11. Forcing and Coupling Ocean only

  12. Flow diagram MPI barrier at symbols

  13. Results Shown Zonal salinity section in February Monthly average ice concentration Interannual differences in ice concentration and thickness Relative importance of dynamics and thermodynamics Terra Nova Bay effect on salinity Bottom salinity

  14. Salinity year 4 Higher salinity with dynamic sea ice Too much salinity Convection over bathymetry Mixed layer thickness?

  15. Ice Concentration Nov 2000 AWS ECMWF Climatology SSM/I

  16. Ice Concentration Dec 2000 OBC

  17. Ice Concentration Jan 2001

  18. Annual Average Ice 2000 AWS forcing 2001

  19. Annual Average Ice processes for 2001 Thermodynamic growth, dynamic loss shows polynyas. Dynamic growth at north shows OBC problem

  20. Bottom Salinity Initial Year 3

  21. Bottom Salinity Year 3 Climatology

  22. AWS wind effect on Terra Nova Bay (year 3) HSSW Effect may be too much due to expanded area

  23. Conclusions • Small scale winds important for polynyas • Ice open boundary conditions need good information • Dynamic sea ice produces more salt than imposed sea ice. • HSSW is created and drains to shelf break as expected.

  24. The End The BEDMAP data were provided courtesy of the BEDMAP consortium. Computer facilities and support were provided by the Commonwealth Center for Coastal Physical Oceanography. This work was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation Grants OCE-99-11731 and OPP-03-37247.

  25. Ice Concentration Jan 2001

  26. Ice Concentration Dec 2001

  27. Ice Concentration, Nov 2001 ECMWF AWS climatology SSM/I obs

  28. Salinity year 2

  29. Salinity year 3

  30. Tnb year 2

  31. Tnb year 1

  32. Winds near Terra Nova Bay Black arrows are NCEP/QSCAT Red arrow is AWS station

More Related