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Journal ArticleDOI

Tracer studies of pathways and rates of meltwater transport through Arctic summer sea ice

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors found that the seasonal evolution of first-year and multi-year ice permeability and surface morphology determine four distinct stages of melt, starting at the start of the ablation season (stage 1), ponding is widespread and lateral melt flow dominates.
Abstract
[1] At the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean (SHEBA) program's field site in the northern Chukchi Sea, snow and ice meltwater flow was found to have a strong impact on the heat and mass balance of sea ice during the summer of 1998. Pathways and rates of meltwater transport were derived from tracer studies (H218O, 7Be, and release of fluorescent dyes), complemented by in situ sea-ice permeability measurements. It was shown that the balance between meltwater supply at the surface (averaging between 3.5 and 10.5 mm d−1) and ice permeability (between 10−9 m2) determines the retention and pooling of meltwater, which in turn controls ice albedo. We found that the seasonal evolution of first-year and multiyear ice permeability and surface morphology determine four distinct stages of melt. At the start of the ablation season (stage 1), ponding is widespread and lateral melt flow dominates. Several tens of cubic meters of meltwater per day were found to drain hundreds to thousands of square meters of ice through flaws and permeable zones. Significant formation of underwater ice, composed between 50% of meteoric water, formed at these drainage sites. Complete removal of snow cover, increase in ice permeability, and reductions in hydraulic gradients driving fluid flow mark stage 2, concurrent with a reduction in pond coverage and albedo. During stage 3, maximum permeabilities were measured, with surface meltwater penetrating to 1 m depth in the ice and convective overturning and desalination found to dominate the lower layers of first-year and thin multiyear ice. Enhanced fluid flow into flaws and permeable zones was observed to promote ice floe breakup and disintegration, concurrent with increases in pond salinities and 7Be. Advective heat flows of several tens of watts per square meter were derived, promoting widening of ponds and increases in pond coverage. Stage 4 corresponds to freeze-up. Roughly 40% of the total surface melt was retained by the ice cover within the ice matrix as well as in surface and under-ice ponds (with a total net retention of 15%). Based on this work, areas of improvement for fully prognostic simulations of ice albedo are identified, calling for parameterizations of sea-ice permeability and the integration of ice topography and refined ablation schemes into atmosphere-ice-ocean models.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the engineering properties of sea ice

TL;DR: In this paper, the physical properties (microstructure, thickness, salinity, porosity, and density) and the mechanical properties (tensile, flexural, shear, uni-axial compression and multiaxial compression strength, borehole strength, failure envelope, creep, elastic and strain modulus, Poisson's ratio, fracture toughness and friction) are explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal evolution of the albedo of multiyear Arctic sea ice

TL;DR: In this article, the spectral and wavelength-integrated albedo on multi-year sea ice was measured every 2.5 m along a 200m survey line from April through October.
Journal Article

Seasonal evolution of the albedo of multiyear Arctic sea ice : The surface heat budget of arctic ocen (SHEBA)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured spectral and wavelength-integrated albedo on multi-year sea ice from a 200m survey line from April through October and observed changes in the evolution of albedos.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved sea ice shortwave radiation physics in CCSM4: The impact of melt ponds and aerosols on Arctic Sea ice

TL;DR: The Community Climate System Model, version 4 has revisions across all components and the most notable improvements are the incorporation of a new shortwave radiative transfer scheme and the capabilities that this enables.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in Arctic sea ice result in increasing light transmittance and absorption

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the first large-scale under-ice light measurements, operating spectral radiometers on a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) under Arctic sea ice in summer.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sea Ice-Albedo Climate Feedback Mechanism

TL;DR: In this paper, the sea ice-albedo feedback mechanism over the Arctic Ocean multi-year sea ice is investigated by conducting a series of experiments using several one-dimensional models of the coupled sea ice atmosphere system.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Optical Properties of Ice and Snow in the Arctic Basin

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured light transmission and reflection on first-year sea ice near Point Barrow, Alaska, and on multi-year ice near Fletcher's Ice Island in the Beaufort Sea (lat. 84° N., long. 77°W.).
Journal ArticleDOI

An energy-conserving thermodynamic model of sea ice

TL;DR: In this paper, an energy-conserving sea ice model for climate study that accounts for the effect of internal brine-pocket melting on surface ablation is introduced. But, the model does not conserve energy during the summer melt season.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal evolution of the albedo of multiyear Arctic sea ice

TL;DR: In this article, the spectral and wavelength-integrated albedo on multi-year sea ice was measured every 2.5 m along a 200m survey line from April through October.
Book ChapterDOI

The Surface Heat and Mass Balance

TL;DR: In the polar oceans, sea ice is only a thin veneer whose thickness and areal extent are sensitive to small changes in heat input as discussed by the authors, leading to their central role in several ice age theories (Brooks, 1949; Ewing and Donn, 1956, 1958; Budyko, 1966).
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