Title: SOPHOCLES Update Bergen St Petersburg Meeting Summaries
1SOPHOCLES Update Bergen St Petersburg Meeting
Summaries
- Siobhan OFarrell, ACE CRC, CMAR,CAWCR, WFO
2SOPHOCLES AIMS
- How well do the models represent Southern ocean
water masses, methods of formation/transformation,
ocean mixing processes and dynamics of the major
currents and thermohaline circulation? - How can ice and ocean model parameterizations be
improved to better represent the interaction
between the ocean and the Southern Hemisphere
cryosphere? - How can we best use satellite observations and in
situ data sets including those gathered during
IPY and through SOOS to constrain the models?
3Scope of project-1
- To examine how well existing models (including
IPCC-AR4, WGOMD-CORE, regional and global eddy
permitting models) represent Cryospheric-ocean
processes and broader Southern ocean processes,
(eddies, down-slope flows convection, mixing
etc). - Identify gaps and the need for improved or new
parameterizations of processes not included
particularly interaction with the cavity under
ice shelves and freshwater input from glacial ice
sources, including icebergs. - Verify how well the models perform against the
best available data set, including satellite
data, ARGO and SOOS, repeat WOCE lines, and IPY
observational programmes of both the ice (ASPECT)
and ocean (CASO-SOIP, SASSI-iAnzone)
observational communities
4Scope of Project-2
- Test new parameterizations of sea ice, polynyas,
ice shelf ocean fluxes and glacial fluxes in
global ice-ocean models, devise experiments to
study sensitivity to warmer climate conditions. - Increase the number of regional models that
include ice shelf cavities to study a range of
processes both within the cavity and the exchange
with open ocean. Examine the sensitivity to
warmer climate conditions. - Build these new parameterizations into the
ocean/ice components of climate simulations
(include as many international groups that can be
persuaded to participate), undertake 20th Century
and 21st century scenario runs.
5 Observed and Model Simulated AAIW Salinity
minimum layer in Eastern Indian Ocean (100oE)
Observed depth and latitude extent of AAIW
salinity (psu) minimum is overlain on model
salinity distribution. Potential density black
contours.
SloyanKamenkovich 2007
6March
September
Number of IPCC AR4 models with gt15 sea ice
(1980-99) vs obs (HadISST) Adapted from Arzel
(2006).
Improving sea ice formulations, but only modest
progress in simulations of observed sea-ice since
the TAR caused by biases in atmosphere and ocean
model.
7Salinity Errorat 30W
8Polynya process, role in bottom water formation
OBS Formation and
Export of Dense Shelf Water
from the Adelie Depression,
East Antarctica
Williams et
al, JGR, 2007 MODELS
Antarctic Coastal Polynya Response to Climate
Change
Marsland et al., JGR,
2007
9Iceberg drift patterns ( AWI)
10Calving at the ice fronts represents the main
mass loss of the Antarctic ice sheet
- Calving 2020 Gt/a gt 75 mSv
- Basal Melting 550 Gt/a gt 17 mSv
- 910 Gt/a gt 28 mSv
- In Weddell Sea 410 Gt/a gt 15 mSv
(Gladstone et al. 2001)?
- NCEP Precipitation 39 mSv (12 mSv)?
- 2.7 x 106 km2 circumpolar continental shelf
These estimates were Before Rignot et al (2008)
estimate who put basal melting and calving 50/50
Melting icebergs provide cold freshwater during
drift and final decay, GFDL and NCAR are now
testing code to account for drifting icebergs in
GCMs
11(Schodlok)
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13Impact of ice shelves on sea ice extent, blue
with ice shelves, red without ice shelves
14Ben Galton-Fenzi
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17Three proposed COREs
- CORE-I 500 year spin-up with repeating Normal
Year Forcing (NYF) (Griffies et al 2008). - CORE-II 50 year retrospective with interannually
varying forcing (details of design under
investigation by WGOMD and collaborators). - CORE-III Fresh water melt perturbation
idealizing the melt of water around Greenland
18Weddell Sea September 1999
KAB036 mixed layer depth
KAB036 ice concentration
KAB042 mixed layer depth
KAB036 ice-ocean heat flux
19Interannual variability in Salinity for KAB042
run at 100m depth, September case, Ross Sea and
Adelie coastline
1997
1998
1999
2000
20Zonal averaged conditions in Weddell Sea 25 years
in AusCOM simulation.
TempMar
Temp Sep
Salinity Mar
Salinity Sep
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23Experiments where the momentum flux is affected
by local sea ice area and sub-grid scale effects.
Figures show differences to reference experiment
over Weddell Sea.
Local Richardson number
Wind stress
Ice velocity
Ice thickness
Ice concentration
Sensible heat flux
Stossel et al, 2008
24- Antarctic sea ice-ocean modelling
- in Belgium
- Martin VancoppenolleUCL Louvain-la-Neuve
- Coll. Hugues Goosse, Anne de Montéty, Thierry
Fichefet, Sylvain Bouillon, Chris König Beatty
25Ice thickness
September
model - clim
obs from Worby et al. (2008)
26Ice salinity
march
september
- Accounting for ice salinity variations ...
- Increases sea ice volume by 10-20
- Induces more ice formation with less salt
rejection - Reduces vertical mixing in the upper ocean
- Reduces the oceanic heat flux
- Increases sea ice formation
obs include various sources from Worby, Lytle,
Perovich, Jeffries, Gow, Eicken, Tison, Hellmer
coauthors
Vancoppenolle et al., 2008b
27LIM Model issues
- Difficult at this stage to say which part of the
model is wrong - Model physics ?
- Ice growth frazil, pancakes, snow ice, flooding
- Deformation
- Ocean heat input ?
- Forcing (wind)
- Need for longer / more comprehensive data sets
- Ice thickness
- Ice deformation
- Forcing (winds, temperatures, snowfall, clouds,
radiation, humidity, ...) - Process studies (frazil, pancake, snow ice
growth, flooding, tides, ocean heat input...) - High interannual variability .vs. Short
validation time series
28OPEN QUESTIONS
- Lead and polynya processes
- Ice shelf cavities
- Circulation of icebergs
- Fresh-water budget, runoff
- Over-flows
- How does resolution impact on water mass formation
29Modelling Activities
- Continue to develop the next generation of high
resolution ice-ocean Southern Ocean model (mostly
in specialized Antarctic Southern ocean groups) - Develop a standard set of metrics for models in
order to evaluate processes - formation rates of
water masses, positions of major fronts, water
mass characteristics in regional and global
models. Develop metrics to assess/validate
ice-shelf circulation models. - Examine a subset (5-10) IPCC AR4 models in the
Southern Ocean using some of the basic statistics
in Russell et al. 2006 and other studies out of
the 24 models in PCMDI repository. - Conduct wide spread diagnostics of water mass
transformation rates / water mass pathways
obtain a detailed understanding of the model
processes in the Southern Ocean. - Work with WGOMD to develop improved approaches
for CORE-II experiments based on analysis of
existing CORE-II experiments to improve results
in the Southern Ocean. - Compile a list of available models, detailing
resolutions, forcing (interannual etc) contact
details and www links for Southern Ocean region.
30 Fill Gaps in model representation of
Cryosphere-Ocean Interaction
- Discuss with other groups (e.g. FRISP, CliC Theme
2 and 3, US Ice sheet Community ) and research
institutes ways to improve the representation of
ice shelves, icebergs in ocean models, and
mechanisms. (There is a need for better initial
conditions in the cavities, e.g. sub cavity
hydrography, topography, etc? There already is
expertise in ice-shelf ocean interaction/dynamics
within the SOPHOCLES group though there is a need
to engage with others within FRISP). - Use high resolution ice shelf cavity models to
calibrate ice shelf cavities that may be included
at climate resolution (1o) as at climate
resolution any cavity will not fully resolve the
detailed processes. - Undertake sensitivity experiments in regional or
global models of the glacial and ice shelf FW
fluxes and response to warming climate. - Consider how polynyas can be more realistically
parameterized so that their effects can be
included in climate models, also improve the
micro-physics in the sea ice for Antarctic
conditions. - Include the FW flux of melting icebergs along
observed drift routes, as far north as ACC.
Consider role of FW flux from runoff from coast
and local melting of glaciers/under ice shelves.
Rely on statistics from satellite data to
determine both fluxes and the new GFDL and CICE
schemes.
31 Links to Observations/SOOS
-
- Extend time series of bottom pressure sensors
and moorings in Drake Passage, continue repeat
sections at inflow and outflow regions of Weddell
and Ross Seas, continue repeat sections on
continental shelf/slope and extend WOCE lines on
to shelf and into sea ice - Consolidation of ocean data sets around
ice-sheets and shelves to monitor freshening in
deep ocean - Encourage SOOS and National programmes to
increase ice shelf cavity measurements for
mixing, circulation, and thermodynamic quantities
and ocean measurements adjacent to ice-shelf
regions to test against models.
32Follow up issues
- No access to WGOMD-CORE1 runs, Repeat annual
cycle runs the models were not intended for
public use, the project was more proof of
concept. - They encourage active participation to CORE2,
have strong links with tropical modelling
group(s), 40 years however is not long enough for
high latitude watermass studies inter-annual
forcing needs to be repeated many times over. - New CORE2 data released by Large and Yeager
available from GFDL website. - Discussions with Adrian Jenkins (re FRISP), he
sees SOPHOCLES focusing on integration the
ice-shelf ocean circulation into the large scale
climate and regional models, whilst they focus
more on the cavity modelling and observations - Links to ecosystem/biogeochemical modelling
groups, SOPHOCLES focus is on the physical
process but the outcomes are needed by other
groups. Joellen Russell involved closely, I have
had contacts with ICED and a suggestion from
Eileen Hoffman at the CCAMLR/IWC suggest a joint
meeting with this community in the next couple of
years.