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Thu Jul 3 18:16:22 2008 UTC (17 years ago) by mlosch
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reorganization. Global cubed sphere does not get a separate section,
rather is degraded to providing boundary conditions and since the
forcing etc is almost the same, to a proxy for describing the Arctic
domain configuration. Hopefully this makes the whole thing
shorter. Topography figure has changed a little. Ice transport figure
is now a single year (1996), so that curves can be distinguished from
each other. Text is modified accordingly.

1 mlosch 1.18 \section{Forward Sensitivity Experiments in an Arctic Domain with Open
2     Boundaries}
3 dimitri 1.1 \label{sec:forward}
4    
5 mlosch 1.18 This section presents results from regional coupled ocean and sea
6     ice simulations of the Arctic Ocean that exercise various capabilities of the MITgcm sea ice
7     model.
8     The objective is to
9     compare the old B-grid LSOR dynamic solver with the new C-grid LSOR and
10     EVP solvers. Additional experiments are carried out to illustrate
11     the differences between different ice advection schemes, ocean-ice
12     stress formulations and the two main options for sea ice
13     thermodynamics in the MITgcm.
14 dimitri 1.2
15 mlosch 1.18 \subsection{Model configuration and experiments}
16     \label{sec:arcticmodel}
17     The Arctic model domain is illustrated in \reffig{arctic_topog}.
18     \begin{figure*}
19     %\includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth,viewport=139 210 496 606,clip]{\fpath/topography}
20     %\includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth,viewport=0 0 496 606,clip]{\fpath/topography}
21     %\includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth]{\fpath/topography}
22     %\includegraphics*[width=0.46\linewidth]{\fpath/archipelago}
23     \includegraphics*[width=\linewidth]{\fpath/topography}
24     \caption{Left: Bathymetry and domain boundaries of Arctic
25     Domain.
26     %; the dashed line marks the boundaries of the inset on the right hand side.
27     The letters in the inset label sections in the
28     Canadian Archipelago, where ice transport is evaluated:
29     A: Nares Strait; %
30     B: \ml{Meighen Island}; %
31     C: Prince Gustaf Adolf Sea; %
32     D: \ml{Brock Island}; %
33     E: M'Clure Strait; %
34     F: Amundsen Gulf; %
35     G: Lancaster Sound; %
36     H: Barrow Strait \ml{W.}; %
37     I: Barrow Strait \ml{E.}; %
38     J: Barrow Strait \ml{N.}; %
39     K: Fram Strait. %
40     The sections A through F comprise the total inflow into the Canadian
41     Archipelago. \ml{[May still need to check the geography.]}
42     \label{fig:arctic_topog}}
43     \end{figure*}
44     It has 420 by 384 grid boxes and is carved out, and obtains open
45     boundary conditions from, a global cubed-sphere configuration
46     similar to that described in \citet{menemenlis05}.
47 dimitri 1.2
48 mlosch 1.18 The global ocean and sea ice results presented in \citet{menemenlis05}
49     were carried out as part
50 dimitri 1.2 of the Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean, Phase II (ECCO2)
51     project. ECCO2 aims to produce increasingly accurate syntheses of all
52     available global-scale ocean and sea-ice data at resolutions that start to
53     resolve ocean eddies and other narrow current systems, which transport heat,
54     carbon, and other properties within the ocean \citep{menemenlis05}. The
55 mlosch 1.18 particular ECCO2 simulation from which we obtain the boundary
56     conditions is a baseline 28-year (1979-2006)
57 dimitri 1.2 integration, labeled cube76, which has not yet been constrained by oceanic and
58 mlosch 1.18 by sea ice data. A cube-sphere grid projection is employed, which permits
59 dimitri 1.2 relatively even grid spacing throughout the domain and which avoids polar
60     singularities \citep{adcroft04:_cubed_sphere}. Each face of the cube comprises
61 mlosch 1.18 510 by 510 grid cells for a mean horizontal grid spacing of 18\,km. There are
62 dimitri 1.2 50 vertical levels ranging in thickness from 10 m near the surface to
63 dimitri 1.16 approximately 450 m at a maximum model depth of 6150 m. The model employs the
64     partial-cell formulation of
65 dimitri 1.2 \citet{adcroft97:_shaved_cells}, which permits accurate representation of the
66 mlosch 1.18 bathymetry. Bathymetry is from the S2004 (W.~Smith, unpublished) blend of the
67 dimitri 1.16 \citet{smi97} and the General Bathymetric Charts of the Oceans (GEBCO) one
68 mlosch 1.18 arc-minute bathymetric grid. % (see Fig.~\ref{fig:CubeBathymetry}).
69 dimitri 1.16 The model is integrated in a volume-conserving configuration using
70 dimitri 1.2 a finite volume discretization with C-grid staggering of the prognostic
71     variables. In the ocean, the non-linear equation of state of \citet{jac95} is
72     used.
73 mlosch 1.18 %
74     The global ocean model is coupled to a sea ice model in a
75     configuration similar to the case C-LSR-ns (see \reftab{experiments}),
76     with open water, dry ice, wet ice, dry snow, and wet snow albedos of,
77     respectively, 0.15, 0.88, 0.79, 0.97, and 0.83.
78 dimitri 1.2
79 dimitri 1.3 This particular ECCO2 simulation is initialized from temperature and salinity
80 dimitri 1.5 fields derived from the Polar science center Hydrographic Climatology (PHC)
81     3.0 \citep{ste01a}. Surface boundary conditions for the period January 1979 to
82     July 2002 are derived from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather
83     Forecasts (ECMWF) 40 year re-analysis (ERA-40) \citep{upp05}. Surface
84     boundary conditions after September 2002 are derived from the ECMWF
85     operational analysis. There is a one month transition period, August 2002,
86     during which the ERA-40 contribution decreases linearly from 1 to 0 and the
87     ECMWF analysis contribution increases linearly from 0 to 1. Six-hourly
88     surface winds, temperature, humidity, downward short- and long-wave
89     radiations, and precipitation are converted to heat, freshwater, and wind
90     stress fluxes using the \citet{large81,large82} bulk formulae. Shortwave
91     radiation decays exponentially as per \citet{pau77}. Low frequency
92     precipitation has been adjusted using the pentad (5-day) data from the Global
93 mlosch 1.18 Precipitation Climatology Project \citep[GPCP,][]{huf01}. The time-mean river
94 dimitri 1.5 run-off from \citet{lar01} is applied globally, except in the Arctic Ocean
95     where monthly mean river runoff based on the Arctic Runoff Data Base (ARDB)
96     and prepared by P. Winsor (personnal communication, 2007) is specificied.
97     Additionally, there is a relaxation to the monthly-mean climatological sea
98     surface salinity values from PHC 3.0, a relaxation time scale of 101 days.
99    
100     Vertical mixing follows \citet{lar94} but with meridionally and vertically
101     varying background vertical diffusivity; at the surface, vertical diffusivity
102     is $4.4\times 10^{-6}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ at the Equator, $3.6\times
103     10^{-6}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ north of 70$^\circ$N, and $1.9\times
104     10^{-5}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ south of 30$^\circ$S and between 30$^\circ$N and
105     60$^\circ$N , with sinusoidally varying values in between these latitudes;
106     vertically, diffusivity increases to $1.1\times 10^{-4}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ at a a
107     depth of 6150 m as per \citet{bry79}. A high order monotonicity-preserving
108     advection scheme \citep{dar04} is employed and there is no explicit horizontal
109     diffusivity. Horizontal viscosity follows \citet{lei96} but modified to sense
110     the divergent flow as per \citet{kem08}.
111 dimitri 1.2
112 mlosch 1.18 The model configuration of cube76 carries over to the Arctic domain
113     configuration except for numerical details related to the non-linear
114     free surface that are not supported by the open boundary code, and the
115     albedos of open water, dry ice, wet ice, dry snow, and wet snow, which
116     are now, respectively, 0.15, 0.85, 0.76, 0.94, and 0.8.
117    
118     The model is integrated from Jan~01, 1992 to Mar~31, 2000
119     \reftab{experiments} gives an overview over the experiments discussed
120     in \refsec{arcticresults}.
121     \begin{table}
122     \caption{Overview over model simulations in \refsec{arcticresults}.
123 mlosch 1.17 \label{tab:experiments}}
124 mlosch 1.15 \begin{tabular}{p{.3\linewidth}p{.65\linewidth}}
125     experiment name & description \\ \hline
126     B-LSR-ns & the original LSOR solver of \citet{zhang97} on an
127 mlosch 1.11 Arakawa B-grid, implying no-slip lateral boundary conditions
128 mlosch 1.18 ($\vek{u}=0$ exactly), advection of ice variables with a 2nd-order
129     central difference scheme plus explicit diffusion for stability \\
130 mlosch 1.15 C-LSR-ns & the LSOR solver discretized on a C-grid with no-slip lateral
131     boundary conditions (implemented via ghost-points) \\
132     C-LSR-fs & the LSOR solver on a C-grid with free-slip lateral boundary
133     conditions \\
134     C-EVP-ns & the EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C-grid with
135     no-slip lateral boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} =
136     150\text{\,s}$ \\
137     C-EVP-ns10 & the EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C-grid with
138     no-slip lateral boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} =
139     10\text{\,s}$ \\
140     C-LSR-ns HB87 & C-LSR-ns with ocean-ice stress coupling according
141     to \citet{hibler87}\\
142     C-LSR-ns TEM & C-LSR-ns with a truncated ellispe method (TEM)
143     rheology \citep{hibler97} \\
144     C-LSR-ns WTD & C-LSR-ns with 3-layer thermodynamics following
145     \citet{winton00} \\
146     C-LSR-ns DST3FL& C-LSR-ns with a third-order flux limited
147     direct-space-time advection scheme for thermodynamic variables
148     \citep{hundsdorfer94}
149     \end{tabular}
150     \end{table}
151     %\begin{description}
152     %\item[B-LSR-ns:] the original LSOR solver of \citet{zhang97} on an
153     % Arakawa B-grid, implying no-slip lateral boundary conditions
154     % ($\vek{u}=0$ exactly);
155     %\item[C-LSR-ns:] the LSOR solver discretized on a C-grid with no-slip lateral
156     % boundary conditions (implemented via ghost-points);
157     %\item[C-LSR-fs:] the LSOR solver on a C-grid with free-slip lateral boundary
158     % conditions;
159     %\item[C-EVP-ns:] the EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C-grid with
160     % no-slip lateral boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} =
161     % 150\text{\,s}$;
162     %\item[C-EVP-fs:] the EVP solver on a C-grid with free-slip lateral
163     % boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} = 150\text{\,s}$;
164     %\item[C-LSR-ns DST3FL:] C-LSR-ns with a third-order flux limited
165     % direct-space-time advection scheme \citep{hundsdorfer94};
166     %\item[C-LSR-ns TEM:] C-LSR-ns with a truncated ellispe method (TEM)
167     % rheology \citep{hibler97};
168     %\item[C-LSR-ns HB87:] C-LSR-ns with ocean-ice stress coupling according
169     % to \citet{hibler87};
170     %\item[C-LSR-ns WTD:] C-LSR-ns with 3-layer thermodynamics following
171     % \citet{winton00};
172     %%\item[C-EVP-ns damp:] C-EVP-ns with additional damping to reduce small
173     %% scale noise \citep{hunke01};
174     %\item[C-EVP-ns10:] the EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C-grid with
175     % no-slip lateral boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} =
176     % 10\text{\,s}$.
177     %\end{description}
178 mlosch 1.10 Both LSOR and EVP solvers solve the same viscous-plastic rheology, so
179     that differences between runs B-LSR-ns, C-LSR-ns, and C-EVP-ns can be
180     interpreted as pure model error. Lateral boundary conditions on a
181 mlosch 1.15 coarse grid (coarse compared to the roughness of the true coast line) are
182 mlosch 1.10 unclear, so that comparing the no-slip solutions to the free-slip
183 mlosch 1.15 solutions gives another measure of uncertainty in sea ice modeling.
184     The remaining experiments explore further sensitivities of the system
185     to different physics (change in rheology, advection and diffusion
186     properties, stress coupling, and thermodynamics) and different time
187     steps for the EVP solutions: \citet{hunke01} uses 120 subcycling steps
188     for the EVP solution. We use two interpretations of this choice where
189     the EVP model is subcycled 120 times within a (short) model timestep
190     of 1200\,s resulting in a very long and expensive integration
191     ($\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$) and 120 times within the
192     forcing timescale of 6\,h ($\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=150\text{\,s}$).
193 mlosch 1.10
194 mlosch 1.18 \subsection{Results}
195     \label{sec:arcticresults}
196    
197     Comparing the solutions obtained with different realizations of the
198     model dynamics is difficult because of the non-linear feedback of the
199     ice dynamics and thermodynamics. Already after a few months the
200     solutions have diverged so far from each other that comparing
201     velocities only makes sense within the first 3~months of the
202 mlosch 1.10 integration while the ice distribution is still close to the initial
203     conditions. At the end of the integration, the differences between the
204 mlosch 1.18 model solutions can be interpreted as cumulated model uncertainties.
205    
206     \subsubsection{Ice velocities in JFM 1992}
207 mlosch 1.10
208     \reffig{iceveloc} shows ice velocities averaged over Janunary,
209     February, and March (JFM) of 1992 for the C-LSR-ns solution; also
210     shown are the differences between B-grid and C-grid, LSR and EVP, and
211     no-slip and free-slip solution. The velocity field of the C-LSR-ns
212     solution (\reffig{iceveloc}a) roughly resembles the drift velocities
213     of some of the AOMIP (Arctic Ocean Model Intercomparison Project)
214 mlosch 1.15 models in a cyclonic circulation regime (CCR) \citep[their
215 mlosch 1.10 Figure\,6]{martin07} with a Beaufort Gyre and a transpolar drift
216     shifted eastwards towards Alaska.
217    
218 mlosch 1.17 \newcommand{\subplotwidth}{0.44\textwidth}
219     %\newcommand{\subplotwidth}{0.3\textwidth}
220     \begin{figure}[tp]
221 mlosch 1.10 \centering
222     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns}]
223 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_C-LSR-ns}}
224 mlosch 1.10 \subfigure[{\footnotesize B-LSR-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
225 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_B-LSR-ns-C-LSR-ns}}
226     \\
227 mlosch 1.10 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-fs $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
228 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_C-LSR-fs-C-LSR-ns}}
229 mlosch 1.10 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
230 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_C-EVP-ns150-C-LSR-ns}}
231 mlosch 1.17 % \\
232     % \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns TEM $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
233     % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_TEM-C-LSR-ns}}
234     % \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns HB87 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
235     % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_HB87-C-LSR-ns}}
236     % \\
237     % \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns WTD $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
238     % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_ThSIce-C-LSR-ns}}
239     % \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns DST3FL $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
240     % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_adv33-C-LSR-ns}}
241     \caption{(a) Ice drift velocity of the C-LSR-ns solution averaged
242     over the first 3 months of integration [cm/s]; (b)-(h) difference
243     between solutions with B-grid, free lateral slip, EVP-solver,
244     truncated ellipse method (TEM), different ice-ocean stress
245     formulation (HB87), different thermodynamics (WTD), different
246     advection for thermodynamic variables (DST3FL) and the C-LSR-ns
247     reference solution [cm/s]; color indicates speed (or differences
248     of speed), vectors indicate direction only.}
249     \label{fig:iceveloc}
250     \end{figure}
251     \addtocounter{figure}{-1}
252     \setcounter{subfigure}{4}
253     \begin{figure}[t]
254 mlosch 1.15 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns TEM $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
255     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_TEM-C-LSR-ns}}
256     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns HB87 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
257     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_HB87-C-LSR-ns}}
258     \\
259     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns WTD $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
260     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_ThSIce-C-LSR-ns}}
261     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns DST3FL $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
262     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_adv33-C-LSR-ns}}
263 mlosch 1.17 \caption{continued}
264 mlosch 1.10 \end{figure}
265 mlosch 1.17 The difference beween runs C-LSR-ns and B-LSR-ns (\reffig{iceveloc}b)
266     is most pronounced along the coastlines, where the discretization
267     differs most between B and C-grids: On a B-grid the tangential
268     velocity lies on the boundary (and is thus zero through the no-slip
269     boundary conditions), whereas on the C-grid it is half a cell width
270     away from the boundary, thus allowing more flow. The B-LSR-ns solution
271     has less ice drift through the Fram Strait and especially the along
272     Greenland's east coast; also, the flow through Baffin Bay and Davis
273     Strait into the Labrador Sea is reduced with respect the C-LSR-ns
274     solution. \ml{[Do we expect this? Say something about that]}
275     %
276     Compared to the differences between B and C-grid solutions, the
277     C-LSR-fs ice drift field differs much less from the C-LSR-ns solution
278     (\reffig{iceveloc}c). As expected the differences are largest along
279     coastlines: because of the free-slip boundary conditions, flow is
280     faster in the C-LSR-fs solution, for example, along the east coast
281     of Greenland, the north coast of Alaska, and the east Coast of Baffin
282     Island.
283 mlosch 1.10
284 mlosch 1.15 The C-EVP-ns solution with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=150\text{\,s}$ is
285     very different from the C-LSR-ns solution (\reffig{iceveloc}d). The
286     EVP-approximation of the VP-dynamics allows for increased drift by
287     over 2\,cm/s in the Beaufort Gyre and the transarctic drift.
288     %\ml{Also the Beaufort Gyre is moved towards Alaska in the C-EVP-ns
289     %solution. [Really?, No]}
290     In general, drift velocities are biased towards higher values in the
291     EVP solutions.
292     % as can be seen from a histogram of the differences in
293     %\reffig{drifthist}.
294     %\begin{figure}[htbp]
295     % \centering
296     % \includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{\fpath/drifthist_C-EVP-ns-C-LSR-ns}
297     % \caption{Histogram of drift velocity differences for C-LSR-ns and
298     % C-EVP-ns solution [cm/s].}
299     % \label{fig:drifthist}
300     %\end{figure}
301 mlosch 1.10
302 mlosch 1.17 Compared to the other parameters, the ice rheology TEM
303     (\reffig{iceveloc}(e)) has a very small effect on the solution. In
304     general the ice drift tends to be increased, because there is no
305     tensile stress and ice can be ``pulled appart'' at no cost.
306     Consequently, the largest effect on drift velocity can be observed
307     near the ice edge in the Labrador Sea. In contrast, in the run with
308     the ice-ocean stress formulation of \citet{hibler87},
309     \reffig{iceveloc}(f) the drift is stronger almost everywhere in the
310     computational domain. The increase is mostly aligned with the general
311     direction of the flow, implying that the different stress formulation
312     reduces the deceleration of drift by the ocean.
313    
314     The 3-layer thermodynamics following \citet{winton00} requires
315     additional information on initial conditions for enthalphy. These
316     different initial conditions make a comparison of the first months
317     difficult to interpret. The drift in the Beaufort Gyre is slightly
318     reduced relative to the reference run C-LSR-ns, but the drift through
319     the Fram Strait is increased. The drift velocities near the ice edge
320     are very different, because the ice extend is already larger in
321     \mbox{C-LSR-ns~WTD}; inward from the ice egde, this run has smaller
322     drift velocities, because the ice motion is more contrained by a
323     larger ice extent than in \mbox{C-LSR-ns}, where the ice at the same
324     place is drifting nearly freely.
325    
326     A more sophisticated advection scheme (\mbox{C-LSR-ns DST3FL},
327     \reffig{iceveloc}(h)) has its largest effect along the ice edge, where
328     the gradients of thickness and concentration are largest. Everywhere
329     else the effect is very small and can mostly be attributed to smaller
330     numerical diffusion (and to the absense of explicitly diffusion for
331     numerical stability).
332    
333 mlosch 1.18 \subsubsection{Ice volume during JFM 2000}
334    
335 mlosch 1.10 \reffig{icethick}a shows the effective thickness (volume per unit
336     area) of the C-LSR-ns solution, averaged over January, February, March
337     of year 2000. By this time of the integration, the differences in the
338     ice drift velocities have led to the evolution of very different ice
339     thickness distributions, which are shown in \reffig{icethick}b--d, and
340 mlosch 1.15 concentrations (not shown).
341 mlosch 1.17 \begin{figure}[tp]
342 mlosch 1.10 \centering
343     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns}]
344 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-LSR-ns}}
345 mlosch 1.10 \subfigure[{\footnotesize B-LSR-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
346 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_B-LSR-ns-C-LSR-ns}}
347     \\
348 mlosch 1.10 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-fs $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
349 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-LSR-fs-C-LSR-ns}}
350 mlosch 1.10 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
351 mlosch 1.15 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-EVP-ns150-C-LSR-ns}}
352 mlosch 1.17 \caption{(a) Effective thickness (volume per unit area) of the
353     C-LSR-ns solution, averaged over the months Janurary through March
354     2000 [m]; (b)-(h) difference between solutions with B-grid, free
355     lateral slip, EVP-solver, truncated ellipse method (TEM),
356     different ice-ocean stress formulation (HB87), different
357     thermodynamics (WTD), different advection for thermodynamic
358     variables (DST3FL) and the C-LSR-ns reference solution [m].}
359     \label{fig:icethick}
360     \end{figure}
361     \addtocounter{figure}{-1}
362     \setcounter{subfigure}{4}
363     \begin{figure}[t]
364 mlosch 1.15 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns TEM $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
365     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_TEM-C-LSR-ns}}
366     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns HB87 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
367     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_HB87-C-LSR-ns}}
368     \\
369     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns WTD $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
370     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_ThSIce-C-LSR-ns}}
371     \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns DST3FL $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
372     {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_adv33-C-LSR-ns}}
373 mlosch 1.17 \caption{continued}
374 mlosch 1.10 \end{figure}
375     The generally weaker ice drift velocities in the B-LSR-ns solution,
376     when compared to the C-LSR-ns solution, in particular through the
377     narrow passages in the Canadian Archipelago, lead to a larger build-up
378     of ice north of Greenland and the Archipelago by 2\,m effective
379     thickness and more in the B-grid solution (\reffig{icethick}b). But
380     the ice volume in not larger everywhere: further west, there are
381     patches of smaller ice volume in the B-grid solution, most likely
382     because the Beaufort Gyre is weaker and hence not as effective in
383     transporting ice westwards. There are also dipoles of ice volume
384 mlosch 1.14 differences with more ice on the upstream side of island groups and
385 mlosch 1.15 less ice in their lee, such as Franz-Josef-Land and
386     Severnaya Semlya\ml{/or Nordland?},
387 mlosch 1.14 because ice tends to flow along coasts less easily in the B-LSR-ns
388     solution.
389 mlosch 1.10
390     Imposing a free-slip boundary condition in C-LSR-fs leads to a much
391 mlosch 1.15 smaller differences to C-LSR-ns in the central Arctic than the
392     transition from the B-grid to the C-grid (\reffig{icethick}c), except
393     in the Canadian Archipelago. There it reduces the effective ice
394     thickness by 2\,m and more where the ice is thick and the straits are
395     narrow. Dipoles of ice thickness differences can also be observed
396     around islands, because the free-slip solution allows more flow around
397 mlosch 1.17 islands than the no-slip solution. Everywhere else the ice volume is
398 mlosch 1.15 affected only slightly by the different boundary condition.
399 mlosch 1.10 %
400 mlosch 1.11 The C-EVP-ns solution has generally stronger drift velocities than the
401 mlosch 1.15 C-LSR-ns solution. Consequently, more ice can be moved from the
402     eastern part of the Arctic, where ice volumes are smaller, to the
403     western Arctic (\reffig{icethick}d). Within the Canadian Archipelago,
404     more drift leads to faster ice export and reduced effective ice
405     thickness. With a shorter time step of
406     $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$ the EVP solution seems to
407     converge to the LSOR solution (not shown). Only in the narrow straits
408     in the Archipelago the ice thickness is not affected by the shorter
409     time step and the ice is still thinner by 2\,m and more, as in the EVP
410     solution with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=150\text{\,s}$.
411    
412 mlosch 1.18 In year 2000, there is more ice everywhere in the domain in
413 mlosch 1.17 \mbox{C-LSR-ns WTD}, \reffig{icethick}(g). This difference, which is
414     even more pronounced in summer (not shown), can be attributed to
415     direct effects of the different thermodynamics in this run. The
416     remaining runs have the largest differences in effective ice thickness
417     long the north coasts of Greenland and Ellesmere Island. Although the
418     effects of TEM and \citet{hibler87}'s ice-ocean stress formulation are
419     so different on the initial ice velocities, both runs have similarly
420     reduced ice thicknesses in this area. The 3rd-order advection scheme
421     has an opposite effect of similar magnitude, point towards more
422     implicit lateral stress with this numerical scheme.
423    
424 mlosch 1.15 The observed difference of order 2\,m and less are smaller than the
425 mlosch 1.17 differences that were observed between different hindcast models and climate
426 mlosch 1.15 models in \citet{gerdes07}. There the range of sea ice volume of
427     different sea ice-ocean models (which shared very similar forcing
428     fields) was on the order of $10,000\text{km$^{3}$}$; this range was
429     even larger for coupled climate models. Here, the range (and the
430     averaging period) is smaller than $4,000\text{km$^{3}$}$ except for
431     the run \mbox{C-LSR-ns~WTD} where the more complicated thermodynamics
432     leads to generally thicker ice (\reffig{icethick} and
433     \reftab{icevolume}).
434     \begin{table}[htbp]
435     \begin{tabular}{lr@{\hspace{5ex}}r@{$\pm$}rr@{$\pm$}rr@{$\pm$}r}
436     model run & ice volume
437     & \multicolumn{6}{c}{ice transport [$\text{flux$\pm$ std.,
438     km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$]}\\
439     & [$\text{km$^{3}$}$]
440     & \multicolumn{2}{c}{FS}
441     & \multicolumn{2}{c}{NI}
442     & \multicolumn{2}{c}{LS} \\ \hline
443     B-LSR-ns & 23,824 & 2126 & 1278 & 34 & 122 & 43 & 76 \\
444     C-LSR-ns & 24,769 & 2196 & 1253 & 70 & 224 & 77 & 110 \\
445     C-LSR-fs & 23,286 & 2236 & 1289 & 80 & 276 & 91 & 85 \\
446     C-EVP-ns & 27,056 & 3050 & 1652 & 352 & 735 & 256 & 151 \\
447     C-EVP-ns10 & 22,633 & 2174 & 1260 & 186 & 496 & 133 & 128 \\
448     C-LSR-ns HB87 & 23,060 & 2256 & 1327 & 64 & 230 & 77 & 114 \\
449     C-LSR-ns TEM & 23,529 & 2222 & 1258 & 60 & 242 & 87 & 112 \\
450     C-LSR-ns WTD & 31,634 & 2761 & 1563 & 23 & 140 & 94 & 63 \\
451     C-LSR-ns DST3FL& 24,023 & 2191 & 1261 & 88 & 251 & 84 & 129
452     \end{tabular}
453     \caption{Arctic ice volume averaged over Jan--Mar 2000, in
454     $\text{km$^{3}$}$. Mean ice transport and standard deviation for the
455     period Jan 1992 -- Dec 1999 through the Fram Strait (FS), the
456     total northern inflow into the Canadian Archipelago (NI), and the
457     export through Lancaster Sound (LS), in $\text{km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$.}
458     \label{tab:icevolume}
459     \end{table}
460 mlosch 1.10
461     The difference in ice volume and ice drift velocities between the
462     different experiments has consequences for the ice transport out of
463 mlosch 1.14 the Arctic. Although by far the most exported ice drifts through the
464     Fram Strait (approximately $2300\pm610\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$), a
465 mlosch 1.13 considerable amount (order $160\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$) ice is
466     exported through the Canadian Archipelago \citep[and references
467 mlosch 1.15 therein]{serreze06}. Note, that ice transport estimates are associated
468     with large uncertainties; also note that tuning an Arctic sea
469     ice-ocean model to reproduce observations is not our goal, but we use
470     the published numbers as an orientation.
471    
472 mlosch 1.18 \subsubsection{Ice transports}
473    
474     \reffig{archipelago} shows an excerpt of a time series of daily
475     averaged, smoothed with monthly running means, ice transports through
476     various straits in the Canadian Archipelago and the Fram Strait for
477     the different model solutions and \reftab{icevolume} summarizes the
478     time series.
479     \begin{figure}
480     %\centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/Jan1992xport}}}
481     %\centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/ice_export}}}
482     %\centerline{{\includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{\fpath/ice_export}}}
483     \centerline{{\includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{\fpath/ice_export1996}}}
484     \caption{Transport through Canadian Archipelago for different solver
485     flavors. The letters refer to the labels of the sections in
486     \reffig{arctic_topog}; positive values are flux out of the Arctic;
487     legend abbreviations are explained in \reftab{experiments}. The mean
488     range of the different model solution is taken over the period Jan
489     1992 to Dec 1999.
490     \label{fig:archipelago}}
491     \end{figure}
492     The export through Fram Strait agrees with the observations in all
493     model solutions (annual averages range from $2110$ to
494 mlosch 1.15 $2300\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$, except for \mbox{C-LSR-ns~WTD} with
495     $2760\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$ and the EVP solution with the long
496     time step of 150\,s with nearly $3000\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$),
497     while the export through the Candian Archipelago is smaller than
498     generally thought. For example, the ice transport through Lancaster
499     Sound is lower (annual averages are $43$ to
500     $256\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$) than in \citet{dey81} who estimates an
501     inflow into Baffin Bay of $370$ to $537\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$, but
502     a flow of only $102$ to $137\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$ further
503     upstream in Barrow Strait in the 1970ies from satellite images.
504     Generally, the EVP solutions have the highest maximum (export out of
505     the Artic) and lowest minimum (import into the Artic) fluxes as the
506     drift velocities are largest in these solutions. In the extreme of
507     the Nares Strait, which is only a few grid points wide in our
508     configuration, both B- and C-grid LSOR solvers lead to practically no
509     ice transport, while the C-EVP solutions allow up to
510 mlosch 1.18 $600\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$ in summer (not shown); \citet{tang04}
511     report $300$ to $350\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$. As as consequence,
512     the import into the Candian Archipelago is larger in all EVP solutions
513 mlosch 1.15 %(range: $539$ to $773\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$)
514     than in the LSOR solutions.
515     %get the order of magnitude right (range: $132$ to
516     %$165\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$);
517     The B-LSR-ns solution is even smaller by another factor of two than the
518     C-LSR solutions (an exception is the WTD solution, where larger ice thickness
519     tends to block the transport).
520     %underestimates the ice transport with $34\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$.
521 mlosch 1.10
522 mlosch 1.15 %\ml{[Transport to narrow straits, area?, more runs, TEM, advection
523     % schemes, Winton TD, discussion about differences in terms of model
524     % error? that's tricky as it means refering to Tremblay, thus our ice
525     % models are all erroneous!]}
526 mlosch 1.10
527 mlosch 1.18 \subsubsection{Discussion}
528    
529 mlosch 1.10 In summary, we find that different dynamical solvers can yield very
530 mlosch 1.15 different solutions. In constrast to that, the differences between
531     free-slip and no-slip solutions \emph{with the same solver} are
532     considerably smaller (the difference for the EVP solver is not shown,
533     but similar to that for the LSOR solver). Albeit smaller, the
534     differences between free and no-slip solutions in ice drift can lead
535     to equally large differences in ice volume, especially in the Canadian
536     Archipelago over the integration time. At first, this observation
537 mlosch 1.11 seems counterintuitive, as we expect that the solution
538     \emph{technique} should not affect the \emph{solution} to a higher
539     degree than actually modifying the equations. A more detailed study on
540     these differences is beyond the scope of this paper, but at this point
541     we may speculate, that the large difference between B-grid, C-grid,
542     LSOR, and EVP solutions stem from incomplete convergence of the
543     solvers due to linearization and due to different methods of
544     linearization \citep[and Bruno Tremblay, personal
545 mlosch 1.10 communication]{hunke01}: if the convergence of the non-linear momentum
546     equations is not complete for all linearized solvers, then one can
547     imagine that each solver stops at a different point in velocity-space
548     thus leading to different solutions for the ice drift velocities. If
549 mlosch 1.15 this were true, this tantalizing circumstance would have a dramatic
550     impact on sea-ice modeling in general, and we would need to improve
551     the solution techniques for dynamic sea ice models, most likely at a very
552     high compuational cost (Bruno Tremblay, personal communication). Further,
553     we observe that the EVP solutions tends to produce effectively
554     ``weaker'' ice that yields more easily to stress. The fast response to
555     changing wind was also observed by \citet{hunke99}, their Fig.\,10--12,
556     where the EVP model adjusts quickly to a cyclonic wind pattern, while
557     the LSOR solution does not. This property of the EVP solutions allows
558     larger ice transports through narrow straits, where the implicit
559     solver LSOR forms rigid ice. The underlying reasons for this striking
560     difference need further exploration.
561    
562     % THIS is now almost all in the text:
563     %\begin{itemize}
564     %\item Configuration
565     %\item OBCS from cube
566     %\item forcing
567     %\item 1/2 and full resolution
568     %\item with a few JFM figs from C-grid LSR no slip
569     % ice transport through Canadian Archipelago
570     % thickness distribution
571     % ice velocity and transport
572     %\end{itemize}
573    
574     %\begin{itemize}
575     %\item Arctic configuration
576     %\item ice transport through straits and near boundaries
577     %\item focus on narrow straits in the Canadian Archipelago
578     %\end{itemize}
579    
580     %\begin{itemize}
581     %\item B-grid LSR no-slip: B-LSR-ns
582     %\item C-grid LSR no-slip: C-LSR-ns
583     %\item C-grid LSR slip: C-LSR-fs
584     %\item C-grid EVP no-slip: C-EVP-ns
585     %\item C-grid EVP slip: C-EVP-fs
586     %\item C-grid LSR + TEM (truncated ellipse method, no tensile stress,
587     % new flag): C-LSR-ns+TEM
588     %\item C-grid LSR with different advection scheme: 33 vs 77, vs. default?
589     %\item C-grid LSR no-slip + Winton:
590     %\item speed-performance-accuracy (small)
591     % ice transport through Canadian Archipelago differences
592     % thickness distribution differences
593     % ice velocity and transport differences
594     %\end{itemize}
595    
596     %We anticipate small differences between the different models due to:
597     %\begin{itemize}
598     %\item advection schemes: along the ice-edge and regions with large
599     % gradients
600     %\item C-grid: less transport through narrow straits for no slip
601     % conditons, more for free slip
602     %\item VP vs.\ EVP: speed performance, accuracy?
603     %\item ocean stress: different water mass properties beneath the ice
604     %\end{itemize}
605 mlosch 1.9
606     %%% Local Variables:
607     %%% mode: latex
608     %%% TeX-master: "ceaice"
609     %%% End:

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