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1 \section{Forward sensitivity experiments}
2 \label{sec:forward}
3
4 This section presents results from global and regional coupled ocean and sea
5 ice simulations that exercise various capabilities of the MITgcm sea ice
6 model. The first set of results is from a global, eddy-permitting, ocean and
7 sea ice configuration. The second set of results is from a regional Arctic
8 configuration, which is used to compare the B-grid and C-grid dynamic solvers
9 and various other capabilities of the MITgcm sea ice model.
10 %
11 \ml{[do we really want to do this?:] The third set of
12 results is from a yet smaller regional domain, which is used to illustrate
13 treatment of sea ice open boundary condition in the MITgcm.}
14
15 \subsection{Global Ocean and Sea Ice Simulation}
16 \label{sec:global}
17
18 The global ocean and sea ice results presented below were carried out as part
19 of the Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean, Phase II (ECCO2)
20 project. ECCO2 aims to produce increasingly accurate syntheses of all
21 available global-scale ocean and sea-ice data at resolutions that start to
22 resolve ocean eddies and other narrow current systems, which transport heat,
23 carbon, and other properties within the ocean \citep{menemenlis05}. The
24 particular ECCO2 simulation discussed next is a baseline 28-year (1979-2006)
25 integration, labeled cube76, which has not yet been constrained by oceanic and
26 by sea ice data. A cube-sphere grid projection is employed, which permits
27 relatively even grid spacing throughout the domain and which avoids polar
28 singularities \citep{adcroft04:_cubed_sphere}. Each face of the cube comprises
29 510 by 510 grid cells for a mean horizontal grid spacing of 18 km. There are
30 50 vertical levels ranging in thickness from 10 m near the surface to
31 approximately 450 m at a maximum model depth of 6150 m. Bathymetry is from the
32 National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC) 2-minute gridded global relief data
33 (ETOPO2) and the model employs the partial-cell formulation of
34 \citet{adcroft97:_shaved_cells}, which permits accurate representation of the
35 bathymetry. The model is integrated in a volume-conserving configuration using
36 a finite volume discretization with C-grid staggering of the prognostic
37 variables. In the ocean, the non-linear equation of state of \citet{jac95} is
38 used.
39
40 The ocean model is coupled to the sea-ice model discussed in
41 \refsec{model} using the following specific options. The
42 zero-heat-capacity thermodynamics formulation of \citet{hibler80} is
43 used to compute sea ice thickness and concentration. Snow cover and
44 sea ice salinity are prognostic. Open water, dry ice, wet ice, dry
45 snow, and wet snow albedo are, respectively, 0.15, 0.88, 0.79, 0.97,
46 and 0.83. Ice mechanics follow the viscous plastic rheology of
47 \citet{hibler79} and the ice momentum equation is solved numerically
48 using the C-grid implementation of the \citet{zhang97}'s LSOR dynamics
49 model discussed hereinabove. The ice is coupled to the ocean using
50 the rescaled vertical coordinate system, z$^\ast$, of \citet{cam08},
51 that is, sea ice does not float above the ocean model but rather
52 deforms the ocean's model surface level.
53
54 This particular ECCO2 simulation is initialized from temperature and salinity
55 fields derived from the Polar science center Hydrographic Climatology (PHC)
56 3.0 \citep{ste01a}. Surface boundary conditions for the period January 1979 to
57 July 2002 are derived from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather
58 Forecasts (ECMWF) 40 year re-analysis (ERA-40) \citep{upp05}. Surface
59 boundary conditions after September 2002 are derived from the ECMWF
60 operational analysis. There is a one month transition period, August 2002,
61 during which the ERA-40 contribution decreases linearly from 1 to 0 and the
62 ECMWF analysis contribution increases linearly from 0 to 1. Six-hourly
63 surface winds, temperature, humidity, downward short- and long-wave
64 radiations, and precipitation are converted to heat, freshwater, and wind
65 stress fluxes using the \citet{large81,large82} bulk formulae. Shortwave
66 radiation decays exponentially as per \citet{pau77}. Low frequency
67 precipitation has been adjusted using the pentad (5-day) data from the Global
68 Precipitation Climatology Project \citep[GPCP][]{huf01}. The time-mean river
69 run-off from \citet{lar01} is applied globally, except in the Arctic Ocean
70 where monthly mean river runoff based on the Arctic Runoff Data Base (ARDB)
71 and prepared by P. Winsor (personnal communication, 2007) is specificied.
72 Additionally, there is a relaxation to the monthly-mean climatological sea
73 surface salinity values from PHC 3.0, a relaxation time scale of 101 days.
74
75 Vertical mixing follows \citet{lar94} but with meridionally and vertically
76 varying background vertical diffusivity; at the surface, vertical diffusivity
77 is $4.4\times 10^{-6}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ at the Equator, $3.6\times
78 10^{-6}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ north of 70$^\circ$N, and $1.9\times
79 10^{-5}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ south of 30$^\circ$S and between 30$^\circ$N and
80 60$^\circ$N , with sinusoidally varying values in between these latitudes;
81 vertically, diffusivity increases to $1.1\times 10^{-4}$~m$^2$~s$^{-1}$ at a a
82 depth of 6150 m as per \citet{bry79}. A high order monotonicity-preserving
83 advection scheme \citep{dar04} is employed and there is no explicit horizontal
84 diffusivity. Horizontal viscosity follows \citet{lei96} but modified to sense
85 the divergent flow as per \citet{kem08}.
86
87 \ml{[Dimitris, here you need to either provide figures, so that I can
88 write text, or you can provide both figures and text. I guess, one
89 figure, showing the northern and southern hemisphere in summer and
90 winter is fine (four panels), as we are showing so many figures in
91 the next section.]}
92
93
94 \subsection{Arctic Domain with Open Boundaries}
95 \label{sec:arctic}
96
97 A series of forward sensitivity experiments have been carried out on
98 an Arctic Ocean domain with open boundaries. The objective is to
99 compare the old B-grid LSR dynamic solver with the new C-grid LSR and
100 EVP solvers. Additional experiments are is carried out to illustrate
101 the differences between different ice advection schemes, ocean-ice
102 stress formulations and the two main options for sea ice
103 thermodynamics in the MITgcm.
104
105 The Arctic domain of integration is illustrated in
106 \reffig{arctic_topog}. It is carved out from, and obtains open
107 boundary conditions from, the global cubed-sphere configuration
108 described above. The horizontal domain size is 420 by 384 grid boxes.
109 \begin{figure*}
110 \includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth]{\fpath/topography}
111 \includegraphics*[width=0.46\linewidth]{\fpath/archipelago}
112 \caption{Left: Bathymetry and domain boudaries of Arctic
113 Domain; the dashed line marks the boundaries of the inset on the
114 right hand side. The letters in the inset label sections in the
115 Canadian Archipelago, where ice transport is evaluated:
116 A: Nares Strait; %
117 B: \ml{Meighen Island}; %
118 C: Prince Gustaf Adolf Sea; %
119 D: \ml{Brock Island}; %
120 E: McClure Strait; %
121 F: Amundsen Gulf; %
122 G: Lancaster Sound; %
123 H: Barrow Strait \ml{W.}; %
124 I: Barrow Strait \ml{E.}; %
125 J: Barrow Strait \ml{N.}. %
126 \label{fig:arctic_topog}}
127 \end{figure*}
128
129 The main dynamic difference from cube sphere is that it does not use
130 rescaled vertical coordinates (z$^\ast$) and the surface boundary
131 conditions for freshwater input are different, because those features
132 are not supported by the open boundary code.
133
134 Open water, dry ice, wet ice, dry snow, and wet snow albedo are,
135 respectively, 0.15, 0.85, 0.76, 0.94, and 0.8.
136
137 The model is integrated from January, 1992 to March \ml{[???]}, 2000,
138 with three different dynamical solvers and two different boundary
139 conditions:
140 \begin{description}
141 \item[B-LSR-ns:] the original LSOR solver of \citet{zhang97} on an
142 Arakawa B-grid, implying no-slip lateral boundary conditions
143 ($\vek{u}=0$ exactly);
144 \item[C-LSR-ns:] the LSOR solver discretized on a C-grid with no-slip lateral
145 boundary conditions (implemented via ghost-points);
146 \item[C-LSR-fs:] the LSOR solver on a C-grid with free-slip lateral boundary
147 conditions;
148 \item[C-EVP-ns:] the EVP solver of \citet{hunke01} on a C-grid with
149 no-slip lateral boundary conditions; and
150 \item[C-EVP-fs:] the EVP solver on a C-grid with free-slip lateral
151 boundary conditions.
152 \end{description}
153 Both LSOR and EVP solvers solve the same viscous-plastic rheology, so
154 that differences between runs B-LSR-ns, C-LSR-ns, and C-EVP-ns can be
155 interpreted as pure model error. Lateral boundary conditions on a
156 coarse grid (compared to the roughness of the true coast line) are
157 unclear, so that comparing the no-slip solutions to the free-slip
158 solutions gives another measure of uncertainty in sea ice modeling.
159
160 A principle difficulty in comparing the solutions obtained with
161 different variants of the dynamics solver lies in the non-linear
162 feedback of the ice dynamics and thermodynamics. Already after a few
163 months the solutions have diverged so far from each other that
164 comparing velocities only makes sense within the first 3~months of the
165 integration while the ice distribution is still close to the initial
166 conditions. At the end of the integration, the differences between the
167 model solutions can be interpreted as cumulated model uncertainties.
168
169 \reffig{iceveloc} shows ice velocities averaged over Janunary,
170 February, and March (JFM) of 1992 for the C-LSR-ns solution; also
171 shown are the differences between B-grid and C-grid, LSR and EVP, and
172 no-slip and free-slip solution. The velocity field of the C-LSR-ns
173 solution (\reffig{iceveloc}a) roughly resembles the drift velocities
174 of some of the AOMIP (Arctic Ocean Model Intercomparison Project)
175 models in an cyclonic circulation regime (CCR) \citep[their
176 Figure\,6]{martin07} with a Beaufort Gyre and a transpolar drift
177 shifted eastwards towards Alaska.
178
179 The difference beween runs C-LSR-ns and B-LSR-ns (\reffig{iceveloc}b)
180 is most pronounced along the coastlines, where the discretization
181 differs most between B and C-grids: On a B-grid the tangential
182 velocity lies on the boundary (and thus zero per the no-slip boundary
183 conditions), whereas on the C-grid the its half a cell width away from
184 the boundary, thus allowing more flow. The B-LSR-ns solution has less
185 ice drift through the Fram Strait and especially the along Greenland's
186 east coast; also, the flow through Baffin Bay and Davis Strait into
187 the Labrador Sea is reduced with respect the C-LSR-ns solution.
188 \ml{[Do we expect this? Say something about that]}
189 %
190 Compared to the differences between B and C-grid solutions,the
191 C-LSR-fs ice drift field differs much less from the C-LSR-ns solution
192 (\reffig{iceveloc}c). As expected the differences are largest along
193 coastlines: because of the free-slip boundary conditions, flow is
194 faster in the C-LSR-fs solution, for example, along the east coast
195 of Greenland, the north coast of Alaska, and the east Coast of Baffin
196 Island.
197 \begin{figure}[htbp]
198 \centering
199 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns}]
200 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_lsr_noslip}}
201 \subfigure[{\footnotesize B-LSR-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
202 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_bgrid-lsr_noslip}}\\
203 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-fs $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
204 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_lsr_slip-lsr_noslip}}
205 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
206 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMuv_evp_noslip-lsr_noslip}}
207 \caption{(a) Ice drift velocity of the C-LSR-ns solution averaged
208 over the first 3 months of integration [cm/s]; (b)-(d) difference
209 between B-LSR-ns, C-LSR-fs, C-EVP-ns, and C-LSR-ns solutions
210 [cm/s]; color indicates speed (or differences of speed), vectors
211 indicate direction only.}
212 \label{fig:iceveloc}
213 \end{figure}
214
215 The C-EVP-ns solution is very different from the C-LSR-ns solution
216 (\reffig{iceveloc}d). The EVP-approximation of the VP-dynamics allows
217 for increased drift by over 2\,cm/s in the Beaufort Gyre and the
218 transarctic drift. \ml{Also the Beaufort Gyre is moved towards Alaska
219 in the C-EVP-ns solution. [Really?]} In general, drift velocities are
220 biased towards higher values in the EVP solutions as can be seen from
221 a histogram of the differences in \reffig{drifthist}.
222 \begin{figure}[htbp]
223 \centering
224 \includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{\fpath/drifthist_evp_noslip-lsr_noslip}
225 \caption{Histogram of drift velocity differences for C-LSR-ns and
226 C-EVP-ns solution [cm/s].}
227 \label{fig:drifthist}
228 \end{figure}
229
230 \reffig{icethick}a shows the effective thickness (volume per unit
231 area) of the C-LSR-ns solution, averaged over January, February, March
232 of year 2000. By this time of the integration, the differences in the
233 ice drift velocities have led to the evolution of very different ice
234 thickness distributions, which are shown in \reffig{icethick}b--d, and
235 area distributions (not shown). \ml{Compared to other solutions, for
236 example, AOMIP the ice thickness distribution blablabal}
237 \begin{figure}[htbp]
238 \centering
239 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-ns}]
240 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_lsr_noslip}}
241 \subfigure[{\footnotesize B-LSR-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
242 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_bgrid-lsr_noslip}}\\
243 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-LSR-fs $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
244 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_lsr_slip-lsr_noslip}}
245 \subfigure[{\footnotesize C-EVP-ns $-$ C-LSR-ns}]
246 {\includegraphics[width=0.44\textwidth]{\fpath/JFMheff2000_evp_noslip-lsr_noslip}}
247 \caption{(a) Effective thickness (volume per unit area) of the
248 C-LSR-ns solution, averaged over the months Janurary through March
249 2000 [m]; (b)-(d) difference between B-LSR-ns, C-LSR-fs, C-EVP-ns,
250 and C-LSR-ns solutions [cm/s].}
251 \label{fig:icethick}
252 \end{figure}
253 %
254 The generally weaker ice drift velocities in the B-LSR-ns solution,
255 when compared to the C-LSR-ns solution, in particular through the
256 narrow passages in the Canadian Archipelago, lead to a larger build-up
257 of ice north of Greenland and the Archipelago by 2\,m effective
258 thickness and more in the B-grid solution (\reffig{icethick}b). But
259 the ice volume in not larger everywhere: further west, there are
260 patches of smaller ice volume in the B-grid solution, most likely
261 because the Beaufort Gyre is weaker and hence not as effective in
262 transporting ice westwards. There are also dipoles of ice volume
263 differences with more ice on the \ml{luv [what is this in English?,
264 upstream]} and less ice in the the lee of island groups, such as
265 Franz-Josef-Land and \ml{IDONTKNOW}, because ice tends to flow along
266 coasts less easily in the B-LSR-ns solution.
267
268 Imposing a free-slip boundary condition in C-LSR-fs leads to a much
269 smaller differences to C-LSR-ns than the transition from the B-grid to
270 the C-grid (\reffig{icethick}c), but in the Canadian Archipelago it
271 still reduces the effective ice thickness by up to 2\,m where the ice
272 is thick and the straits are narrow. Dipoles of ice thickness
273 differences can also be observed around islands, because the free-slip
274 solution allows more flow around islands than the no-slip solution.
275 Everywhere else the ice volume is affected only slightly by the
276 different boundary condition.
277 %
278 The C-EVP-ns solution has generally stronger drift velocities than the
279 C-LSR-ns solution. Consequently, more ice can be moved from the eastern
280 part of the Arctic, where ice volumes are smaller, to the western
281 Arctic where ice piles up along the coast (\reffig{icethick}d). Within
282 the Canadian Archipelago, more drift leads to faster ice export and
283 reduced effective ice thickness.
284
285 The difference in ice volume and ice drift velocities between the
286 different experiments has consequences for the ice transport out of
287 the Arctic. Although the most exported ice drifts through the Fram
288 Strait (approximately $2300\pm610\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$), a
289 considerable amount (order $160\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$) ice is
290 exported through the Canadian Archipelago \citep[and references
291 therein]{serreze06}. \reffig{archipelago} shows a time series of
292 \ml{[maybe smooth to different time scales:] daily averaged, smoothed
293 with monthly running means,} ice transports through various straits
294 in the Canadian Archipelago and the Fram Strait for the different
295 model solutions. The export through Fram Strait is too high in all
296 model (annual averages ranges from $3324$ to
297 $3931\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$) solutions, while the export through
298 Lancaster Sound is lower (annual averages are $41$ to
299 $201\text{\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$}$) than compared to observations.
300 Generally, the C-EVP solutions have highest maximum (export out of the
301 Artic) and minimum (import into the Artic) fluxes as the drift
302 velocities are largest in this solution. In the extreme, both B- and
303 C-grid LSOR solvers have practically no ice transport through the
304 Nares Strait, which is only a few grid points wide, while the C-EVP
305 solutions allow up to 500\,km$^3$\,y$^{-1}$ in summer.
306 \begin{figure}
307 %\centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/Jan1992xport}}}
308 \centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/ice_export}}}
309 \caption{Transport through Canadian Archipelago for different solver
310 flavors. The letters refer to the labels of the sections in
311 \reffig{arctic_topog}; positive values are flux out of the Arctic.
312 \label{fig:archipelago}}
313 \end{figure}
314
315 \ml{[Transport to narrow straits, area?, more runs, TEM, advection
316 schemes, Winton TD, discussion about differences in terms of model
317 error? that's tricky as it means refering to Tremblay, thus our ice
318 models are all erroneous!]}
319
320 In summary, we find that different dynamical solvers can yield very
321 different solutions. In contrast, the differences between free-slip
322 and no-slip solutions \emph{with the same solver} are considerably
323 smaller (the difference for the EVP solver is not shown, but similar
324 to that for the LSOR solver). Albeit smaller, the differences between
325 free and no-slip solutions in ice drift can lead to large differences
326 in ice volume over the integration time. At first, this observation
327 seems counterintuitive, as we expect that the solution
328 \emph{technique} should not affect the \emph{solution} to a higher
329 degree than actually modifying the equations. A more detailed study on
330 these differences is beyond the scope of this paper, but at this point
331 we may speculate, that the large difference between B-grid, C-grid,
332 LSOR, and EVP solutions stem from incomplete convergence of the
333 solvers due to linearization and due to different methods of
334 linearization \citep[and Bruno Tremblay, personal
335 communication]{hunke01}: if the convergence of the non-linear momentum
336 equations is not complete for all linearized solvers, then one can
337 imagine that each solver stops at a different point in velocity-space
338 thus leading to different solutions for the ice drift velocities. If
339 this were true, this tantalizing circumstance had a dramatic impact on
340 sea-ice modeling in general, and we would need to improve the solution
341 technique of dynamic sea ice model, most likely at a very high
342 compuational cost (Bruno Tremblay, personal communication).
343
344
345
346 \begin{itemize}
347 \item Configuration
348 \item OBCS from cube
349 \item forcing
350 \item 1/2 and full resolution
351 \item with a few JFM figs from C-grid LSR no slip
352 ice transport through Canadian Archipelago
353 thickness distribution
354 ice velocity and transport
355 \end{itemize}
356
357 \begin{itemize}
358 \item Arctic configuration
359 \item ice transport through straits and near boundaries
360 \item focus on narrow straits in the Canadian Archipelago
361 \end{itemize}
362
363 \begin{itemize}
364 \item B-grid LSR no-slip: B-LSR-ns
365 \item C-grid LSR no-slip: C-LSR-ns
366 \item C-grid LSR slip: C-LSR-fs
367 \item C-grid EVP no-slip: C-EVP-ns
368 \item C-grid EVP slip: C-EVP-fs
369 \item C-grid LSR + TEM (truncated ellipse method, no tensile stress,
370 new flag): C-LSR-ns+TEM
371 \item C-grid LSR with different advection scheme: 33 vs 77, vs. default?
372 \item C-grid LSR no-slip + Winton:
373 \item speed-performance-accuracy (small)
374 ice transport through Canadian Archipelago differences
375 thickness distribution differences
376 ice velocity and transport differences
377 \end{itemize}
378
379 We anticipate small differences between the different models due to:
380 \begin{itemize}
381 \item advection schemes: along the ice-edge and regions with large
382 gradients
383 \item C-grid: less transport through narrow straits for no slip
384 conditons, more for free slip
385 \item VP vs.\ EVP: speed performance, accuracy?
386 \item ocean stress: different water mass properties beneath the ice
387 \end{itemize}
388
389 %\begin{figure}
390 %\centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/JFM1992uvice}}}
391 %\caption{Surface sea ice velocity for different solver flavors.
392 %\label{fig:iceveloc}}
393 %\end{figure}
394
395 %\begin{figure}
396 %\centerline{{\includegraphics*[width=0.6\linewidth]{\fpath/JFM2000heff}}}
397 %\caption{Sea ice thickness for different solver flavors.
398 %\label{fig:icethick}}
399 %\end{figure}
400
401 %%% Local Variables:
402 %%% mode: latex
403 %%% TeX-master: "ceaice"
404 %%% End:

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