A Mesoscale Air-Ice-Ocean Feedback Mechanism for the Ice Drift in the Marginal Ice Zone

Abstract

Ice drift in the marginal ice zone (MIZ) is a very important feature of air-ice-ocean interaction at high latitude. Thermally generated surface winds, blowing from ice to water (ice breeze) with some deflection due to the earth rotation, force the ice drift and ocean currents near the MIZ. By changing the surface temperature gradient, the ice motion and the ocean currents feed back on the surface winds. A coupled air-ice-ocean theoretical model for the MIZ is employed to discuss the ice drift pattern with such a feedback mechanism. The steady-state solutions show that an off-ice and divergent wind field not only producee a dilation of the MIZ (as people generally think), but also generates a compaction of MIZ for some circumstances. An ice divergence/convergence criterion is found. The time-dependent solutions show that the ice motion exhibits two bifurcations. First, it bifurcates into decaying and growing modes. Second, the growing mode bifurcatee into non-oscillatory and oscillatory states. Finally, the model predicts the ice edge upwelling.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 01, 1988
Accession Number
ADA530519

Entities

People

  • Peter Cheng Chu

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Boundaries
  • Boundary Layer
  • Chukchi Sea
  • Eigenvalues
  • Equations
  • Feedback
  • Flow
  • High Latitudes
  • Latitude
  • Marginal Ice Zones
  • Ocean Currents
  • Oceans
  • Regions
  • Sea Ice
  • Steady State
  • Surface Temperature
  • Temperature Gradients

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science / Meteorology, specifically Wind Wave Turbulence.
  • Polar and Arctic Studies