Title: Report on Ice Sheet Modelling Activities
1Report on Ice Sheet Modelling Activities
- David Holland
- Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences
- New York University, NY USA
-
- Jonathan Gregory
- Walker Institute, Department of Meteorology,
University of Reading, UK - Met Office Hadley Centre, Exeter, UK
WCRP/CLIVAR Working Group on Coupled Modelling
12th Session Paris, France September 20, 2008
2A Story of Two Ice Sheets
3- Why does it matter?
- What are the obstacles to progress?
- What are we doing?
4Recent Changes Greenland
- - Jakobshavn Isbrae retreats in 1997
- Forced by the ocean
- (which was forced by the Atmosphere, the NAO)
5Recent Changes Antarctica
- - Larsen B collapses in 2002
- Forced by the surface melt ponds
- (which was forced by the Atmosphere)
6Recent Changes Antarctica
- - Pine Island thinning over last decade
- Forced by the ocean warm waters
- (which was forced by the Atmosphere)
7IPCC Summary for Policy Makers
8IPCC Excluding future rapid
9- Why does it matter?
- What are the obstacles to progress?
- What are we doing?
10Is it Predictable?
Chaotic system? Rate of Observational
Progress? Rate of Modeling Progress?
11IPCC Antarctic Circumpolar Current (an analog
for uncertainty?)
Russell et al, 2006
12Challenges of Physics
there remains uncertainty in the physics that
controls the rate of flow of ice steams coming
from the land and feeding into the ice shelves,
floating on the ocean.
13Challenges of Physics
- physics of calving at ice fronts,
- grounding line migration,
- buttressing effects associated with ice geometry,
- basal melting of ice-shelves,
- and the associated sub-ice-shelf ocean
circulation.
14Challenges of Physics
even regarding the comparatively
well-understood processes determining ice-sheet
surface mass balance, there are substantial
uncertainties.
15Challenges of Computation
- how to represent on the grids of relatively
coarse resolution global climate models the steep
marginal areas of ice-sheets, on which any
surface melting occurs, and the coastal ocean
circulation that may impinge on ice-shelves. - within the ice models themselves how to represent
regions of rapid dynamic changes, such as at the
grounding line.
16- Why does it matter?
- What are the obstacles to progress?
- What are we doing?
17Ice Sheet Modeling Community
West Antarctic Ice Sheet Initiative (WAIS)
18Ice Sheet Modeling Community
Forum for Research Into Ice Shelf Processes
(FRISP)
19Ice Sheet Modeling Community
Ice Sheet Model Intercomparison Project (ISMIP)
20Recent Sea-Level Workshops
Evolution of the Antarctic Ice Sheet Royal
Society of London, 2005
21Recent Sea-Level Workshops
Understanding Sea-Level Rise and
Variability Paris, 2006
22Recent Sea-Level Workshops
Toward a New Generation of Ice Sheet Models GFDL,
2007
23Recent Sea-Level Workshops
to stimulate activity between
the cryospheric community and climate
modelers in national laboratories
Predicting Sea Level in the 21st Century The
Role of Ice-Ocean Interaction New York
University, 2008
24Recent Sea-Level Workshops
Workshop on Improving Ice Sheet Models SCAR, 2008
25Recent Sea-Level Workshops
Building a Next Generation Community Ice
Model LANL, 2008
26UK Efforts
- Hadley Centre using HadCM3 coupled to the
Greenland 3D ISM of Huybrechts - starting to use the Glimmer 3D ISM coupled to
Hadley Centre AOGCMs - Glimmer is being developed (led by Payne), to
include an adaptive-mesh high-resolution
treatment of ice streams and the grounding line - The Hadley Centre AGCM is being improved as
regards ice-sheet surface mass balance
27EU Effort ice2sea
- proposed EU Framework 7 project on estimating
the future contribution of continental ice to
sea-level rise - focus on key processes not included in current
models, - essential observations (especially for the
satellite period), - projection of ice-sheet surface mass balance and
ice-shelf basal mass balance using regional
atmosphere and ocean models, - projection of ice-sheet response over 200 years,
- and synthesis including regional sea-level
projection - and risk assessment
- does not include model development, two-way
coupling between ice sheet and climate (only
climate-ice-sheet)
28LANL Efforts
- developing a Community Ice Sheet Model (CISM)
- implementing CISM in the
- Community Climate System Model (CCSM)
- strategy for developing an IPCC-ready community
ice sheet model in 1 to 2 years - and fully coupled model later on
29Conclusions The Good
- there exists an ever-growing (?) and diverse
group of researchers studying ice sheets and sea
level - some detectable momentum in EU and USA efforts
30Conclusions The Bad
- Topography poorly known
- Hydrographic Observations in the cavity are
inadequate - Models are poorly constrained
- Parameterizations of melting are inaccurate by
at least 100 - Most 3-D models have static ice shelf and
dynamic ocean (or vice versa)
31Conclusions The Ugly
- No existing capability to model future
- sea level change
- The capability is not obviously going to emerge
anytime soon - There is no detailed plan