Seasonal changes in Arctic sea-ice morphology

被引:25
|
作者
Perovich, DK [1 ]
Richter-Menge, JA [1 ]
Tucker, WB [1 ]
机构
[1] USA, Cold Reg Res & Engn Lab, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
来源
关键词
D O I
10.3189/172756401781818716
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The morphology of the Arctic sea-ice cover undergoes large changes over all annual cycle, These changes have a significant impact on the heat budget of the ice cover, primarily by affecting the distribution of the solar radiation absorbed in the ice-ocean system. In spring, the ice is snow-covered and ridges are the prominent features. The pack consists of large angular floes, with a small amount of open water contained primarily in linear leads. By the end Of Summer the ice cover has undergone a major transformation. The snow cover is gone, many of the ridges have been reduced to hummocks and the ice surface is mottled with melt ponds. One surface characteristic that changes little during the summer is the appearance of the bare ice, which remains white despite significant melting. The large floes have broken into a mosaic of smaller, rounded floes surrounded by a lace of open water. Interestingly, this break-up occurs during summer when the dynamic forcing and the internal ice stress are small. During the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean (SHEBA) field experiment we had all opportunity to Observe the break-tip process both oil a small scale from the ice surface, and oil a larger scale via aerial photographs. Floe break-up resulted in large part from thermal deterioration of the ice. The large floes of spring are riddled with cracks and leads that Formed and froze during fall, winter and spring. These features melt open during summer, weakening the ice so that modest dynamic forcing can break apart the large floes into many fragments. Associated with this break-up is an increase in the number of floes, a decrease in the size of floes, an increase in floe perimeter and an increase in the area of open water.
引用
收藏
页码:171 / 176
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] THE POTENTIAL TRANSPORT OF POLLUTANTS BY ARCTIC SEA-ICE
    PFIRMAN, SL
    EICKEN, H
    BAUCH, D
    WEEKS, WF
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 1995, 159 (2-3) : 129 - 146
  • [32] ARCTIC SEA-ICE ALBEDO FROM AVHRR
    LINDSAY, RW
    ROTHROCK, DA
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 1994, 7 (11) : 1737 - 1749
  • [33] NOTES ON THE BIOLOGY OF SEA-ICE IN THE ARCTIC AND ANTARCTIC
    SPINDLER, M
    POLAR BIOLOGY, 1994, 14 (05) : 319 - 324
  • [34] Natural causes of Arctic sea-ice loss
    Neil Swart
    Nature Climate Change, 2017, 7 : 239 - 241
  • [35] Robustness of Arctic sea-ice predictability in GCMs
    Blanchard-Wrigglesworth, E.
    Bushuk, M.
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2019, 52 (9-10) : 5555 - 5566
  • [37] Natural causes of Arctic sea-ice loss
    Swart, Neil
    NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2017, 7 (04) : 239 - 241
  • [38] Temporal evolution of Arctic sea-ice temperature
    Perovich, DK
    Elder, BC
    ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY, VOL 33, 2001, 33 : 207 - 211
  • [39] Glacial shortcut of Arctic sea-ice transport
    Staerz, Michael
    Gong, Xun
    Stein, Ruediger
    Darby, Dennis A.
    Kauker, Frank
    Lohmann, Gerrit
    EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2012, 357 : 257 - 267
  • [40] Sea-ice algal phenology in a warmer Arctic
    Tedesco, L.
    Vichi, M.
    Scoccimarro, E.
    SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2019, 5 (05)