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1 \section{Arctic Ocean Sensitivity Experiments}
2 \label{sec:arcticmodel}
3
4 This section presents results from regional coupled ocean and sea
5 ice simulations of the Arctic Ocean that exercise various capabilities of the
6 MITgcm sea ice model. The objective is to
7 compare the old B-grid LSOR dynamic solver with the new C-grid LSOR and
8 EVP solvers. Additional experiments are carried out to illustrate
9 the differences between different lateral boundary conditions, ice advection
10 schemes, ocean-ice stress formulations, and alternate sea ice
11 thermodynamics.
12
13 The Arctic Ocean domain has 420 by 384 grid
14 boxes and is illustrated in \reffig{arctic_topog}.
15 \begin{figure}
16 \centering
17 \includegraphics*[width=\stdfigwidth]{\fpath/topography}
18 \caption{Bathymetry and domain boundaries of Arctic
19 Domain, cut-out from the global solution.
20 The white
21 line encloses what is loosely referred to as the Canadian Arctic
22 Archipelago in the text.
23 %; the dashed line marks the boundaries of the inset on the right hand side.
24 The letters label sections in the
25 Canadian Archipelago, where ice transport is evaluated:
26 A: Nares Strait; %
27 B: Peary Channel; %
28 C: Prince Gustaf Adolf Sea; %
29 D: Ballantyne Strait; %
30 E: M'Clure Strait; %
31 F: Amundsen Gulf; %
32 G: Lancaster Sound; %
33 H: Barrow Strait W.; %
34 I: Barrow Strait E.; %
35 J: Barrow Strait N.; %
36 K: Fram Strait. %
37 The sections A through F comprise the total Arctic inflow into the Canadian
38 Archipelago. The white labels denote Ellesmere Island of the Queen
39 Elizabeth Islands (QEI), Svalbard (SB), Franz Joseph Land (FJL),
40 Severnaya Zemlya (SZ), and the New Siberian Islands (NSI).
41 \label{fig:arctic_topog}}
42 \end{figure}
43 For each sensitivity experiment, the model is integrated from
44 January~1, 1992 to March~31, 2000.
45 % \ml{[Reviewer 2: Why this period? I have no idea how to explain this]
46 This time period is arbitrary and for comparison purposes only: it was chosen to be long
47 enough to observe systematic differences due to details of the model
48 configuration and short enough to allow many sensitivity
49 experiments.
50
51 \begin{table}
52 \caption{Overview of forward model sensitivity experiments in a regional
53 Arctic Ocean domain.
54 \label{tab:experiments}}
55 \centering
56 \begin{tabular}{p{.15\linewidth}p{.76\linewidth}}
57 {\em Experiment}& {\em Description} \\ \hline
58 C-LSR-ns & The LSOR solver discretized on a C~grid with no-slip
59 lateral boundary conditions (implemented via ghost-points),
60 advection of ice variables with a 2nd-order central difference
61 scheme plus explicit diffusion for stability. \\
62 B-LSR-ns & The original LSOR solver of \citet{zhang97} on an
63 Arakawa~B grid, implying no-slip lateral boundary conditions
64 ($\vek{u}=0$ exactly). \\
65 % C-EVP-ns & The EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C~grid with
66 % no-slip lateral boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} =
67 % 150\text{\,s}$. \\
68 C-EVP-10 & The EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C~grid with
69 no-slip lateral boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} =
70 10\text{\,s}$ ($\mathop{\widehat{=}}$ 120 subcycling steps). \\
71 C-EVP-03 & The EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C~grid with
72 no-slip lateral boundary conditions and $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp} =
73 3\text{\,s}$ ($\mathop{\widehat{=}}$ 400 subcycling steps). \\
74 C-LSR-fs & The LSOR solver on a C~grid with free-slip lateral
75 boundary conditions (no lateral stress on coast lines). \\
76 DST3FL & C-LSR-ns with a third-order flux limited
77 direct-space-time advection scheme for thermodynamic variables
78 \citep{hundsdorfer94}. \\
79 TEM & C-LSR-ns with a truncated ellipse method (TEM)
80 rheology \citep{hibler97}. \\
81 HB87 & C-LSR-ns with ocean-ice stress coupling according
82 to \citet{hibler87}.\\
83 WTD & C-LSR-ns with 3-layer thermodynamics following
84 \citet{winton00}.
85 \end{tabular}
86 \end{table}
87 \reftab{experiments} gives an overview of all the experiments discussed in
88 this section. %
89 In all experiments except for DST3FL ice is advected
90 with the original second order central differences scheme that
91 requires small extra diffusion for stability reasons. %
92 The differences between integrations
93 B-LSR-ns and C-LSR-ns can be interpreted as being
94 caused by model finite dimensional numerical truncation. %
95
96 Both the LSOR and the EVP solvers aim to solve for the same
97 viscous-plastic rheology; while the LSOR solver is an iterative scheme
98 with a convergence criterion the EVP solution relaxes towards the VP
99 solution in the limit of infinite intergration time. The differences
100 between integrations C-LSR-ns, C-EVP-10, and C-EVP-03 are caused by
101 fundamentally different approaches to regularize large bulk and shear
102 viscosities; LSOR and other iterative techniques need to clip large
103 viscosities, while EVP introduces elastic waves that damp out within
104 one sub-cycling sequence. Both LSOR and EVP solutions represent
105 approximations to true viscous-plastic rheology and neither will be
106 considered ``truth'' in our comparisons: On the one hand, LSOR (and
107 other implicit solvers) requires many so-called pseudo time steps to
108 fully converge in a non-linear sense \citep{lemieux09}, which makes
109 this type of solver very expensive. We use only 2~(customary) pseudo
110 time steps. On the other hand, the elastic wave energy in EVP damps
111 out completely only after an infinite time compared to the damping
112 time scale, so that in practice the rheology is not completely
113 viscous-plastic.
114
115 For the EVP solver we use two different damping time scales and
116 sub-cycling time steps. In the C-EVP-10 experiment, the damping time
117 scale is one third of the ocean model times step; the EVP model is
118 sub-cycled 120 times within each 1200\,s ocean model time step
119 resulting in $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$. In the C-EVP-03
120 experiment, we reduce the damping time scale to a tenth of the ocean
121 model time step to achieve faster damping of elastic waves. In this
122 case, the EVP model is sub-cycled 400 times within an ocean model time
123 step with a time step of 3~seconds in order to resolve the shorter
124 damping time scale. \reftab{timings} shows timings for these
125 cases. Note that in our configuration on 36~CPUs of a SGI~Altix~3700
126 the EVP technique is faster than LSOR for the 10\,seconds time step
127 (C-EVP-10); the shorter time step of 3\,seconds was chosen to arrive
128 at approximately the same computational effort as for C-LSR-ns.
129 %
130 For comparison purposes, \citet{hunke01} used a sub-cycling time step
131 of 30\,s for an ocean model time step of 3600\,s and a damping time
132 scale of 1296\,s.
133 \begin{table}
134 % timing with -fp-model precise for 2232 time steps
135 % a) C-EVP-ns150relax7200 SEAICE_DYNSOLVER 1735 FORWARD_STEP 4306
136
137 % timings with -mp -ftz for 2232 time steps
138 % a) C-EVP-ns150relax7200 SEAICE_DYNSOLVER 20.5 FORWARD_STEP 2301
139 % b) C-LSR-ns SEAICE_DYNSOLVER 600 FORWARD_STEP 2887
140 % c) C-EVP-10 SEAICE_DYNSOLVER 262 FORWARD_STEP 2541
141 \caption{Integration throughput on 36 CPUs of a SGI
142 Altix~3700. \label{tab:timings}}
143 \centering
144 \begin{tabular}{p{.2\linewidth}p{.25\linewidth}p{.25\linewidth}}
145 & \multicolumn{2}{l}{\em Wall clock per integration month (2232 time
146 steps)} \\
147 {\em Experiment}& {\em ice dynamics}& {\em entire model} \\ \hline
148 C-LSR-ns & 600 sec & 2887 sec\\
149 % C-EVP-ns & 20.5 sec & 2301 sec \\
150 C-EVP-10 & 262 sec & 2541 sec \\
151 C-EVP-03 & 875 sec & 3159 sec
152 \end{tabular}
153 \end{table}
154
155 Lateral boundary conditions on a coarse grid (coarse
156 compared to the roughness of the true coast line) are ill-defined so that
157 comparing a no-slip solution (C-LSR-ns) to a free-slip solution (C-LSR-fs)
158 gives another measure of uncertainty in the sea ice model. The sensitivity
159 experiments also explore the response of the coupled ocean and sea ice model
160 to different numerics and physics, that is, to changes in advection
161 and diffusion properties (DST3FL), in rheology (TEM), in stress coupling
162 (HB87), and in thermodynamics (WTD).
163
164 Comparing the solutions obtained with different realizations of the
165 model dynamics is difficult because of the non-linear feedback of the
166 ice dynamics and thermodynamics. Already after a few months the
167 model trajectories have diverged far enough so that
168 velocity differences are easier to interpret within the first 3~months
169 of the integration while the ice distributions are still comparable.
170 The effect on ice-thickness of different numerics tends to accumulate
171 along the time integration, resulting in larger differences - also
172 easier to interpret - at the end of the integration.
173 We choose C-LSR-ns as the reference run for all comparisons
174 bearing in mind that any other choice is equally valid.
175 %Already after a few months the
176 %solutions have diverged so far from each other that comparing
177 %velocities only makes sense within the first 3~months of the
178 %integration while the ice distribution is still close to the initial
179 %conditions. At the end of the integration, the differences between the
180 %model solutions can be interpreted as accumulated model errors.
181
182 Tables~\ref{tab:differences} and \ref{tab:rmsdiff} summarize the differences
183 in drift speed and effective ice thickness for all experiments. These
184 differences are discussed in detail below.
185
186 \begin{table}
187 \caption{Overview over drift speed differences (JFM of first year of
188 integration) and effective ice thickness differences (JFM of last year of
189 integration) relative to C-LSR-ns. For reference the corresponding
190 values for C-LSR-ns are given in the first line.
191 \label{tab:differences}}
192 \centering
193 \begin{tabular}{lr@{\hspace{3ex}}r@{\hspace{3ex}}r@{\hspace{3ex}}r}
194 % \begin{tabular}{p{.25\linewidth}p{.15\linewidth}p{.15\linewidth}p{.15\linewidth}p{.15\linewidth}}
195 speed (cm/s) & & & & \\
196 & mean & rms & median & max \\ \hline
197 C-LSR-ns (ref) & 3.295 & 4.711 & 2.502 & 28.599 \\ \hline
198 B-LSR-ns & -0.236 & 0.714 & -0.071 & 14.355 \\
199 % C-EVP-ns & 0.887 & 1.366 & 0.523 & 11.061 \\
200 C-EVP-10 & 0.266 & 0.513 & 0.213 & 10.506 \\
201 C-EVP-03 & 0.198 & 0.470 & 0.143 & 10.407 \\
202 C-LSR-fs & 0.160 & 0.472 & 0.084 & 9.921 \\
203 DST3FL & 0.035 & 0.301 & 0.008 & 10.251 \\
204 TEM & 0.027 & 0.168 & 0.014 & 8.922 \\
205 HB87 & 0.184 & 0.316 & 0.169 & 9.175 \\
206 WTD & 0.354 & 1.418 & 0.039 & 26.298 \\
207 & & & & \\
208 thickness (m) & & & & \\
209 & mean & rms & median & max \\ \hline
210 C-LSR-ns (ref) & 1.599 & 1.941 & 1.542 & 10.000 \\ \hline
211 B-LSR-ns & 0.065 & 0.175 & 0.049 & 2.423 \\
212 % C-EVP-ns & -0.096 & 0.467 & -0.023 & 5.458 \\
213 C-EVP-10 & -0.082 & 0.399 & -0.020 & 5.993 \\
214 C-EVP-03 & -0.069 & 0.374 & -0.014 & 5.688 \\
215 C-LSR-fs & -0.037 & 0.289 & -0.005 & 3.947 \\
216 DST3FL & 0.014 & 0.338 & -0.018 & 9.246 \\
217 TEM & -0.020 & 0.138 & -0.001 & 2.541 \\
218 HB87 & -0.052 & 0.114 & -0.029 & 2.520 \\
219 WTD & 0.518 & 0.667 & 0.528 & 4.144
220 \end{tabular}
221 \end{table}
222 \begin{table}
223 \caption{Root-mean-square differences for drift speed (JFM of first year of
224 integration) and effective thickness (JFM of last year of
225 integration) for the ``Candian Arctic Archipelago'' defined in
226 \reffig{arctic_topog} and the remaining domain (``rest'').
227 For reference the corresponding values for C-LSR-ns are given in
228 the first line.
229 % \ml{[This table can be removed in the submitted version,
230 % it just gives use number to work with in the
231 % text.]}
232 \label{tab:rmsdiff}}
233 \centering
234 \begin{tabular}{lr@{\hspace{3ex}}r@{\hspace{3ex}}r@{\hspace{3ex}}
235 r@{\hspace{3ex}}r@{\hspace{3ex}}r}
236 & \multicolumn{3}{c}{rms(speed) (cm/s)}
237 & \multicolumn{3}{c}{rms(thickness) (m)} \\
238 & total & CAA & rest & total & CAA & rest \\ \hline
239 C-LSR-ns (ref) & 4.711 & 1.425 & 5.037 & 1.941 & 3.304 & 1.625 \\ \hline
240 B-LSR-ns & 0.714 & 0.445 & 0.747 & 0.175 & 0.369 & 0.117 \\
241 % C-EVP-ns & 1.366 & 0.915 & 1.424 & 0.467 & 1.207 & 0.150 \\
242 C-EVP-10 & 0.513 & 0.259 & 0.543 & 0.399 & 1.044 & 0.105 \\
243 C-EVP-03 & 0.470 & 0.234 & 0.497 & 0.374 & 0.982 & 0.095 \\
244 C-LSR-fs & 0.472 & 0.266 & 0.497 & 0.289 & 0.741 & 0.099 \\
245 DST3FL & 0.301 & 0.063 & 0.323 & 0.338 & 0.763 & 0.201 \\
246 TEM & 0.168 & 0.066 & 0.179 & 0.138 & 0.359 & 0.040 \\
247 HB87 & 0.316 & 0.114 & 0.337 & 0.114 & 0.236 & 0.079 \\
248 WTD & 1.418 & 1.496 & 1.406 & 0.667 & 1.110 & 0.566
249 \end{tabular}
250 \end{table}
251
252 \subsection{Ice velocities in JFM 1992}
253
254 \newcommand{\subplotwidth}{0.47\textwidth}
255 \begin{figure*}[tp]
256 %\newcommand{\subplotwidth}{0.3\textwidth}
257 %\begin{figure*}[tp]
258 \centering
259 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns}]
260 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_C-LSR-ns}}
261 \subfigure[{\footnotesize B-LSR-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
262 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_B-LSR-ns-C-LSR-ns}}
263 \\
264 % \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
265 % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_C-EVP-ns150relax7200-C-LSR-ns}}
266 % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_C-EVP-ns150-C-LSR-ns}}
267 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-10 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
268 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_C-EVP-ns-C-LSR-ns}}
269 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-03 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
270 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_C-EVP-3relax120-C-LSR-ns}}
271 \caption{(a) Ice drift velocity of the C-LSR-ns solution averaged over the
272 first 3~months of integration (cm/s); (b)-(h) difference between the
273 C-LSR-ns reference solution and solutions with, respectively, the B-grid
274 solver, the %EVP-solver with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=150\text{\,s}$, the
275 EVP-solver with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$, the
276 EVP-solver with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=3\text{\,s}$, free lateral slip,
277 a different advection scheme (DST3FL) for thermodynamic variables, the
278 truncated ellipse method (TEM), and a different ice-ocean stress
279 formulation (HB87). %
280 Color indicates speed or differences of speed and vectors indicate
281 direction only. The direction vectors represent block averages
282 over eight by eight grid points at every eighth velocity point. %
283 Note that color scale varies from panel to panel.}
284 \label{fig:iceveloc}
285 \end{figure*}
286 \addtocounter{figure}{-1}
287 \setcounter{subfigure}{4}
288 \begin{figure*}[tp]
289 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-fs $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
290 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_C-LSR-fs-C-LSR-ns}}
291 \subfigure[{\footnotesize DST3FL $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
292 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_adv33-C-LSR-ns}}
293 \\
294 \subfigure[{\footnotesize TEM $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
295 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_TEM-C-LSR-ns}}
296 \subfigure[{\footnotesize HB87 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
297 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv1992_HB87-C-LSR-ns}}
298 \caption{Continued.}
299 \end{figure*}
300
301 \reffig{iceveloc} shows ice velocities averaged over January,
302 February, and March (JFM) of 1992 for the C-LSR-ns solution; also
303 shown are the differences between this reference solution and various
304 sensitivity experiments. The velocity field of the C-LSR-ns
305 solution (\reffig{iceveloc}a) roughly resembles the drift velocities
306 of some of the AOMIP (Arctic Ocean Model Intercomparison Project)
307 models in a cyclonic circulation regime \citep[][their
308 Figure\,6]{martin07} with a Beaufort Gyre and a Transpolar Drift
309 shifted eastwards towards Alaska.
310
311 The difference between experiments C-LSR-ns and B-LSR-ns (\reffig{iceveloc}b)
312 is most pronounced ($\sim 2$\,cm/s) along the coastlines, where the
313 discretization differs most between B and C~grids. On a B~grid the tangential
314 velocity lies on the boundary, and is thus zero through the no-slip boundary
315 conditions, whereas on the C~grid it is half a cell width away from the
316 boundary, thus allowing more flow. The B-LSR-ns solution has less ice drift
317 through the Fram Strait and along Greenland's East Coast; also, the flow
318 through Baffin Bay and Davis Strait into the Labrador Sea is reduced with
319 respect to the C-LSR-ns solution.
320
321 The C-EVP-10 solution with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$
322 allows for increased drift by
323 order 1\,cm/s in the Beaufort Gyre and in the Transpolar Drift. In
324 general, drift velocities tend towards higher values in
325 the EVP solution with a root-mean-square (rms) difference of
326 0.51\,cm/s. As the number of sub-cycling time steps increases, the EVP
327 approximation converges towards VP dynamics: the C-EVP-03 solution
328 with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=3\text{\,s}$ (\reffig{iceveloc}d) is
329 closer to the C-LSR-ns solution (root-mean-square of 0.47\,cm/s and only
330 0.23\,cm/s in the CAA). Both EVP solutions have a stronger
331 Beaufort Gyre as in \citet{hunke99}.
332
333 % As expected the differences between C-LSR-fs and C-LSR-ns
334 % (\reffig{iceveloc}e) are also largest ($\sim 2$\,cm/s) along the
335 % coastlines. In constrast to B-LSR-ns, the ice drift for C-LSR-fs is on
336 % average faster than for C-LSR-ns while for B-LSR-ns it is on average
337 % slower than for C-LSR-ns. This is because the free-slip boundary
338 % condition of C-LSR-fs allows the flow to be faster than C-LSR-ns, for
339 % example, along the East Coast of Greenland, the North Coast of Alaska,
340 % and the East Coast of Baffin Island.
341 As expected the differences between C-LSR-fs and C-LSR-ns
342 (\reffig{iceveloc}e) are also largest ($\sim 2$\,cm/s) along the
343 coastlines. The free-slip boundary
344 condition of C-LSR-fs allows the flow to be faster, for
345 example, along the East Coast of Greenland, the North Coast of Alaska,
346 and the East Coast of Baffin Island, so that the ice drift for C-LSR-fs is on
347 average faster than for C-LSR-ns where for B-LSR-ns it is on average
348 slower. % than for C-LSR-ns.
349
350 The more sophisticated advection scheme of \mbox{DST3FL}
351 (\reffig{iceveloc}f) has the largest effect along the ice edge
352 \citep[see also][]{merryfield03}, where the gradients of thickness
353 and concentration are largest and differences in velocity can reach
354 5\,cm/s (maximum differences are 10\,cm/s at individual grid
355 points). Everywhere else the effect is very small (rms of
356 0.3\,cm/s) and can mostly be attributed to smaller numerical diffusion
357 (and to the absence of explicit diffusion that is required for
358 numerical stability in a simple second order central differences
359 scheme). %
360 Note, that the advection scheme has an indirect effect on the ice
361 drift, but a direct effect on the ice transport, and hence the ice
362 thickness distribution and ice strength; a modified ice strength then
363 leads to a modified drift field.
364
365 Compared to the other parameters, the ice rheology TEM
366 (\reffig{iceveloc}g) also has a very small (mostly $<0.5$\,cm/s and
367 the smallest rms-difference of all solutions)
368 effect on the solution. In general the ice drift tends to increase
369 because there is no tensile stress and ice can drift apart at
370 no cost. Consequently, the largest effect on drift velocity can be
371 observed near the ice edge in the Labrador Sea. Note in experiments
372 \mbox{DST3FL} and TEM the drift pattern is slightly changed as opposed
373 to all other C-grid experiments, although this change is small.
374
375 By way of contrast, the ice-ocean stress formulation of
376 \citet{hibler87} results in stronger drift by up to 2\,cm/s almost
377 everywhere in the computational domain (\reffig{iceveloc}h). The
378 increase is mostly aligned with the general direction of the flow,
379 implying that the \citet{hibler87} stress formulation reduces the
380 deceleration of drift by the ocean.
381
382 \subsection{Integrated effect on ice volume during JFM 2000}
383
384 \begin{figure*}[tp]
385 \centering
386 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns}]
387 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-LSR-ns}}
388 \subfigure[{\footnotesize B-LSR-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
389 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_B-LSR-ns-C-LSR-ns}}
390 \\
391 % \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
392 % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-EVP-ns150relax7200-C-LSR-ns}}
393 % {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-EVP-ns150-C-LSR-ns}}
394 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-10 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
395 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-EVP-ns-C-LSR-ns}}
396 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-03 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
397 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-EVP-3relax120-C-LSR-ns}}
398 \caption{(a) Effective thickness (volume per unit area) of the
399 C-LSR-ns solution, averaged over the months January through March
400 2000 (m); (b)-(h) difference between the
401 C-LSR-ns reference solution and solutions with, respectively, the B-grid
402 solver, the %EVP-solver with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=150\text{\,s}$, the
403 EVP-solver with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$, the
404 EVP-solver with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=3\text{\,s}$, free lateral slip,
405 a different advection scheme (DST3FL) for thermodynamic variables, the
406 truncated ellipse method (TEM), and a different ice-ocean stress
407 formulation (m).}
408 \label{fig:icethick}
409 \end{figure*}
410 \addtocounter{figure}{-1}
411 \setcounter{subfigure}{4}
412 \begin{figure*}[tp]
413 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-fs $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
414 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_C-LSR-fs-C-LSR-ns}}
415 \subfigure[{\footnotesize DST3FL $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
416 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_adv33-C-LSR-ns}}
417 \\
418 \subfigure[{\footnotesize TEM $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
419 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_TEM-C-LSR-ns}}
420 \subfigure[{\footnotesize HB87 $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
421 {\includegraphics[width=\subplotwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_HB87-C-LSR-ns}}
422 \caption{Continued.}
423 \end{figure*}
424
425 \reffig{icethick}a shows the effective thickness (volume per unit area) of the
426 C-LSR-ns solution, averaged over January, February, and March of year 2000,
427 that is, eight years after the start of the simulation. By this time of the
428 integration, the differences in ice drift velocities have led to the evolution
429 of very different ice thickness distributions (as shown in
430 Figs.~\ref{fig:icethick}b--h) and concentrations (not shown) for each
431 sensitivity experiment. The mean ice volume for the January--March 2000
432 period is also reported in \reftab{icevolume}.
433
434 \begin{table}
435 \caption{Arctic ice volume averaged over Jan--Mar 2000, in
436 km$^3$. Mean ice transport (and standard deviation in parenthesis)
437 for the period Jan 1992 -- Dec 1999 through the Fram Strait (FS), the
438 total northern inflow into the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA), and the
439 export through Lancaster Sound (LS), in $\text{km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$.
440 \label{tab:icevolume}}
441 \centering
442 \begin{tabular}{lllll}
443 & {\em Volume\;\;} &
444 \multicolumn{3}{l}{{\em Sea ice transport} (km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$)} \\
445 {\em Experiment\;\;} & (km$^3$) & FS & CAA & LS \\ \hline
446 C-LSR-ns & 24,769 & 2196\,(1253) & 70\,(224) & 77\,(110) \\
447 B-LSR-ns & 23,824 & 2126\,(1278) & 34\,(122) & 43\,(76) \\
448 % C-EVP-ns & 22,426 & 2415\,(1394) & 209\,(561) & 159\,(133) \\
449 C-EVP-10 & 22,633 & 2174\,(1260) & 186\,(496) & 133\,(128) \\
450 C-EVP-03 & 22,819 & 2161\,(1252) & 175\,(461) & 123\,(121) \\
451 C-LSR-fs & 23,286 & 2236\,(1289) & 80\,(276) & 91\,(85) \\
452 DST3FL & 24,023 & 2191\,(1261) & 88\,(251) & 84\,(129) \\
453 TEM & 23,529 & 2222\,(1258) & 60\,(242) & 87\,(112) \\
454 HB87 & 23,060 & 2256\,(1327) & 64\,(230) & 77\,(114)
455 \\ WTD & 31,634 & 2761\,(1563) & 23\,(140) & 94\,(63)
456 \end{tabular}
457 \end{table}
458
459 The generally weaker ice drift velocities in the B-LSR-ns solution,
460 when compared to the C-LSR-ns solution, in particular through the
461 narrow passages in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, where the
462 B-LSR-ns solution tends to block channels more often than the
463 C-LSR-ns solution, lead to a larger build-up
464 of ice (2\,m or more) north of Greenland and north of the Archipelago in the
465 B-grid solution (\reffig{icethick}b).
466 The ice volume, however, is not larger everywhere. Further west there are
467 patches of smaller ice volume in the B-grid solution, most likely
468 because the Beaufort Gyre is weaker and hence not as effective in
469 transporting ice westwards. There is no obvious explanation, why
470 the ice is thinner in the western part of the Canadian
471 Archipelago. We attribute this difference to the different effective
472 slipperiness of the coastlines in the two solutions, because in the free-slip solution
473 the pattern is reversed.
474 There are also dipoles of ice volume
475 differences with more ice on the upstream side and less ice on the downstream
476 side of island groups, for example, of Franz Josef Land, of Severnaya Zemlya,
477 of the New Siberian Islands, and of the Queen Elizabeth Islands
478 (see \reffig{arctic_topog} for their geographical locations). This is
479 because ice tends to flow less easily along coastlines, around islands, and
480 through narrow channels in the B-LSR-ns solution than in the C-LSR-ns solution.
481
482 The C-EVP-10 solution with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$ has
483 thinner ice in the Candian Archipelago and in the central Arctic Ocean
484 than the C-LSR-ns solution (\reffig{icethick}c); the rms difference
485 between C-EVP-10 and C-LSR-ns ice thickness is 40\,cm. Thus it is
486 larger than the rms difference between B- and C-LSR-ns, mainly
487 because within the Canadian Arctic Archipelago more drift in C-EVP-10
488 leads to faster ice export and to reduced effective ice thickness. With a
489 shorter time step ($\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=3\text{\,s}$) the EVP
490 solution converges towards the LSOR solution in the central Arctic
491 (\reffig{icethick}d). In the narrow straits in the Archipelago,
492 however, the ice thickness is not affected by the shorter time step
493 and the ice is still thinner by 2\,m or more, as it is in the EVP
494 solution with $\Delta{t}_\mathrm{evp}=10\text{\,s}$.
495
496 %DM C-EVP-10 is incredibly similar to C-LSR-fs - why is that?
497 %ML Ultimately I do not know, but the mechanism is described: weaker
498 %ML ice in EVP and less horizontal friction in C-LSR-fs along coasts
499 %ML basically have a similar effect. The velocities are not that similar.
500
501 Imposing a free-slip boundary condition in C-LSR-fs leads to much
502 smaller differences to C-LSR-ns (\reffig{icethick}e)
503 than the transition from the B~grid to the C~grid, except
504 in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, where the free-slip solution
505 allows more flow (see \reftab{rmsdiff}). There, it reduces the effective ice
506 thickness by 2\,m or more where the ice is thick and the straits are
507 narrow (leading to an overall larger rms-difference than the B-LSR-ns
508 solution, see \reftab{rmsdiff}). Dipoles of ice thickness differences can also be observed
509 around islands because the free-slip solution allows more flow around
510 islands than the no-slip solution. %
511 %ML Everywhere else the ice thickness is
512 %ML affected only slightly by the different boundary condition.
513 The differences in the Central Arctic are much smaller in absolute
514 value than the differences in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago
515 although there are also interesting changes in the ice-distribution
516 in the interior: Less ice in the Central Arctic is most likely
517 caused by more export (see \reftab{icevolume}).
518
519 The remaining sensitivity experiments, DST3FL, TEM, and HB87, have the
520 largest differences in effective ice thickness along the north coasts
521 of Greenland and Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.
522 Although using the TEM rheology and the \citet{hibler87} ice-ocean
523 stress formulation has different effects on the initial ice
524 velocities (\reffig{iceveloc}g and~h), both experiments have
525 similarly reduced ice thicknesses in this area. The 3rd-order
526 advection scheme (DST3FL) has an opposite effect of similar magnitude,
527 pointing towards more implicit lateral stress with this numerical
528 scheme. %
529 The HB87 experiment shows ice thickness reduction in the entire Arctic
530 basin greater than in any other experiment, possibly because more
531 drift leads to faster export of ice.
532 %%ML then let's remove this statement
533 %In the Central Arctic all three sensitivity experiments are similar to
534 %the reference C-LSR-ns.
535 %% Hmmm - looking at figs it looks like 4(h) HB87 - C-LSR-ns is not so similar
536 %% in the central Arctic.
537
538 % \begin{figure}[t]
539 % \centering
540 % \includegraphics[width=\stdfigwidth]{\fpath/rangehist}
541 % \caption{Histogram of ranges ice thickness and drift
542 % velocity differences between all model solutions (excluding WTD).}
543 % \label{fig:rangehist}
544 % \end{figure}
545 % \reffig{rangehist} summarizes Figures~\ref{fig:iceveloc}
546 % and~\ref{fig:icethick} by showing histograms of maximum sea ice thickness and
547 % drift velocity differences between the various sensitivity experiments,
548 % excluding the \citet{winton00} thermodynamics (WTD) experiment, which is
549 % discussed separately in \refsec{TED}. These histograms are obtained by
550 % computing the range of
551 % values between all model solutions (excluding WTD) at each grid
552 % point. The
553 % mean (median) range for ice thickness is 52 (37)\,cm and for drift speed
554 % 2.1 (1.7)\,cm/s; the maximal values are 9.2\,m and
555 % 18\,cm/s, respectively.
556 \begin{figure}[t]
557 \centering
558 \includegraphics[width=\mediumfigwidth]{\fpath/diffhist}
559 \caption{Histograms of ice thickness and drift velocity differences
560 relative to C-LSR-ns; the bin-width is 2~cm for thickness and
561 0.1~cm/s for speed. The black line is the cumulative number of grid
562 points in percent of all grid points. The colors indicate the
563 distribution of these grid points between the various experiments
564 in percent of the black line.}
565 \label{fig:diffhist}
566 \end{figure}
567 \reffig{diffhist} summarizes Figures~\ref{fig:iceveloc}
568 and~\ref{fig:icethick} by showing histograms of sea ice thickness and
569 drift velocity differences to the reference C-LSR-ns. The black line
570 is the cumulative number grid points in percent of all grid points
571 of all models where differences up to the value on the abscissa
572 are found. For example, ice thickness differences up to 50\,cm are
573 found in 90\% of all grid points, or equally differences above
574 50\,cm are only found in 10\% of all grid points. The colors
575 indicate the distribution of these grid points between the various
576 experiments. For example, 65\% to 90\% of grid points with ice
577 thickness differences between 40\,cm and 1\,m are found in the run
578 WTD. The runs B-LSR-ns, C-EVP-10, and HB87 only have a fairly large
579 number of grid points with differences below 40\,cm. B-LSR-ns and
580 WTD dominate nearly all velocity differences. The remaining
581 contributions are small except for small differences below
582 1\,cm/s. Only very few points contribute to very large differences
583 in thickness (above 1\,m) and velocity (above 4\,cm/s) indicated by
584 the small slope of the cumlative number of grid point (black line).
585
586 % \begin{figure}[t]
587 % \centering
588 % \includegraphics[width=\stdfigwidth]{\fpath/nsidc_hist}
589 % \caption{Histograms of sea ice drift speeds for the interior Arctic
590 % for JFM 2000 in comparison to observations from NSIDC. \ml{[This
591 % figure needs to be remade with the proper data and the caption
592 % and text needs to be adjusted.]}
593 % \label{fig:nsidc_hist}}
594 % \end{figure}
595 % \ml{[This text is a stubb and will be extended if we decide to include
596 % such a comparison:] \reffig{nsidc_hist} compares histograms of
597 % modeled sea ice drift speeds in JFM (January, February, March) 2000
598 % with a data product by the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
599 % \citep{fowler03}. Drift speeds below 0.5\,cm/s have been discarded
600 % and the domain is restricted to the ``interior Arctic'' as in
601 % \citet{martin07}. Compared to the data product, all runs tend
602 % towards too high velocities with modes between 5 and 8\,cm/s. Drift
603 % speeds below 4\,cm/s are generally less frequent than in the
604 % observations. The histograms are similar for the individual
605 % experiments with the run B-LSR-ns and the EVP runs being differnt in
606 % the low drift speed range. B-LSR-ns procudes too few low velocities,
607 % while C-EVP-10 reproduces the observations between 2 and 4\,cm/s.}
608
609 \subsection{Ice transports}
610 \label{sec:icetransports}
611
612 \begin{figure*}[tp]
613 %\centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/Jan1992xport}}}
614 %\centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/ice_export}}}
615 %\centerline{{\includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{\fpath/ice_export}}}
616 \centerline{{\includegraphics[width=\mediumfigwidth]{\fpath/ice_export1996}}}
617 \caption{Transports of sea ice during 1996 for model sensitivity experiments
618 listed in \reftab{experiments}. Top panel shows flow through the northern
619 edge of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (Sections A--F in
620 \reffig{arctic_topog}), middle panel shows flow through Lancaster Sound
621 (Section G), and bottom panel shows flow through Fram Strait (Section K).
622 Positive values indicate sea ice flux out of the Arctic Ocean. The time
623 series are smoothed using a monthly running mean. The mean range, i.e., the
624 time-mean difference between the model solution with maximum flux and that
625 with minimum flux, is computed over the period January 1992 to December
626 1999.
627 \label{fig:archipelago}}
628 \end{figure*}
629 %DM Could we change order to be consistent with figs 3 and
630 %DM 4, i.e., C-LSR-ns, B-LSR-ns, ...
631
632 The difference in ice volume and in ice drift velocity between the various
633 sensitivity experiments has consequences for sea ice export from the Arctic
634 Ocean. As an illustration (other years are similar), \reffig{archipelago} shows the 1996 time series of sea
635 ice transports through the northern edge of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago,
636 through Lancaster Sound, and through Fram Strait for each model sensitivity
637 experiment. The mean and standard deviation of these ice transports, over the
638 period January 1992 to December 1999, are reported in \reftab{icevolume}. In
639 addition to sea ice dynamics, there are many factors, e.g., atmospheric and
640 oceanic forcing, drag coefficients, and ice strength, that control sea ice
641 export. Although calibrating these various factors is beyond the scope of
642 this manuscript, it is nevertheless instructive to compare the values in
643 \reftab{icevolume} with published estimates, as is done next. This is a
644 necessary step towards constraining this model with data, a key motivation for
645 developing the MITgcm sea ice model and its adjoint.
646
647 The export through Fram Strait for all the sensitivity experiments
648 is consistent with the value of $2300\pm610\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$
649 reported by \citet[and references therein]{serreze06}.
650 %
651 Although Arctic sea ice is exported to the Atlantic Ocean principally through
652 the Fram Strait, \citet{serreze06} estimate that a considerable amount of sea
653 ice ($\sim 160\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$) is also exported through the
654 Canadian Arctic Archipelago. This estimate, however, is associated with large
655 uncertainties. For example, \citet{dey81} estimates an inflow into Baffin Bay
656 of $370$ to $537\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$ but a flow of only $102$ to
657 $137\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$ further upstream in Barrow Strait in the
658 1970's from satellite images; \citet{aagaard89} give approximately
659 $155\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$ for the export through the CAA.
660 The recent estimates of \citet{agnew08} for
661 Lancaster Sound are lower: $102\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$. The model results
662 suggest annually averaged ice transports through Lancaster Sound ranging from
663 $43$ to $133\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$ and total northern inflow of
664 $34$ to $186\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$ (\reftab{icevolume}). These model
665 estimates and their standard deviations cannot be rejected based on the
666 observational estimates.
667
668 Generally, the EVP solutions have the highest maximum (export out of
669 the Arctic) and lowest minimum (import into the Arctic) fluxes as the
670 drift velocities are largest in these solutions. In the extreme of
671 the Nares Strait, which is only a few grid points wide in our
672 configuration, both B- and C-grid LSOR solvers lead to practically no
673 ice transport, while the EVP solutions allow
674 $200\text{--}500\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$ in summer (not shown).
675 \citet{tang04} report $300$ to $350\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$ and
676 \citet{kwok05:_nares_strait} $130\pm65\text{\,km$^3$\,yr$^{-1}$}$. As
677 as consequence, the import into the Canadian Arctic Archipelago is
678 larger in all EVP solutions
679 %(range: $539$ to $773\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$)
680 than in the LSOR solutions.
681 %get the order of magnitude right (range: $132$ to
682 %$165\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$);
683 The B-LSR-ns solution is even smaller by another factor of two than the
684 C-LSR solutions.
685 %underestimates the ice transport with $34\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$.
686
687 \subsection{Thermodynamics}
688 \label{sec:TED}
689
690 The last sensitivity experiment (WTD) listed in \reftab{experiments}
691 is carried out using the 3-layer thermodynamics model of
692 \citet{winton00}. This experiment has different albedo and basal heat
693 exchange formulations from all the other experiments. %
694 Although, the upper-bound albedo values for dry ice, dry snow, and wet
695 snow are the same as for the zero-layer model, the ice albedos in
696 WTD are computed following \citet{hansen83} and can become much
697 smaller as a function of thickness $h$,
698 with a minimum value of $0.2\exp(-h/0.44\text{\,m})$. Further the snow age is taken into
699 account when computing the snow albedo. With the same values for wet
700 snow (0.83), dry snow (0.97), and dry ice (0.88) as for the
701 zero-heat-capacity model (see \refsec{globalmodel}), this results in
702 albedos that range from 0.22 to 0.95 (not shown). Similarly, large
703 differences can be found in the basal heat exchange
704 parameterizations.
705 %
706 For this reason, the resulting ice velocities, volume, and transports
707 have not been included in the earlier comparisons. However, this
708 experiment gives another measure of uncertainty associated with ice
709 modeling. The key difference with the ``zero-layer'' thermodynamic
710 model is a delay in the seaice cycle of approximately one month in
711 the maximum sea-ice thickness and two months in the minimum sea-ice
712 thickness. This is shown in \reffig{seasonalcycle}, which compares
713 the mean sea-ice thickness seasonal cycle of experiments with the
714 zero-heat-capacity (C-LSR-ns) and three-layer (WTD) thermodynamic
715 model. The mean ice thickness is computed for a sector in the
716 western Arctic (75\degN\ to 85\degN\ and 180\degW\ to 140\degW) in
717 order to avoid confounding thickness and extent differences. Similar
718 to \citet{semtner76}, the seasonal cycle for the ``zero-layer''
719 model (gray dashed line) is almost twice as large as for the
720 three-layer thermodynamic model.
721 \begin{figure}[t]
722 \centering
723 \includegraphics[width=\stdfigwidth]{\fpath/SeasonalCycleWest}
724 \caption{Seasonal cycle of mean sea-ice thickness (cm) in a sector in
725 the western Arctic (75\degN\ to 85\degN\ and 180\degW\ to
726 140\degW) averaged over 1992--2000 of experiments C-LSR-ns and WTD.}
727 % \includegraphics[width=\stdfigwidth]{\fpath/SeasonalCycle}
728 % \caption{Seasonal cycle of sea-ice volume (km$^3$) averaged over
729 % 1992--2000 of experiments C-LSR-ns and WTD.}
730 \label{fig:seasonalcycle}
731 \end{figure}
732
733 %%% Local Variables:
734 %%% mode: latex
735 %%% TeX-master: "ceaice_part1"
736 %%% End:

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