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Using Arctic ice mass balance buoys for evaluation of modelled ice energy fluxes
by
Blockley, Ed
, Collins, Mat
, West, Alex
in
Arctic ice
/ Arctic sea ice
/ Buoys
/ Climate models
/ Conduction
/ Constants
/ Datasets
/ Energy
/ Environment models
/ Evaluation
/ Fluxes
/ Heat
/ Ice cover
/ Ice models
/ Ice thickness
/ Mass balance
/ North Pole
/ Physical properties
/ Radiation
/ Regions
/ Sea ice
/ Sea ice models
/ Seasonal variability
/ Seasonal variations
/ Snow density
/ Spatial variability
/ Spatial variations
/ Specific heat
/ Time series
/ Winter
/ Winter ice
2020
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Using Arctic ice mass balance buoys for evaluation of modelled ice energy fluxes
by
Blockley, Ed
, Collins, Mat
, West, Alex
in
Arctic ice
/ Arctic sea ice
/ Buoys
/ Climate models
/ Conduction
/ Constants
/ Datasets
/ Energy
/ Environment models
/ Evaluation
/ Fluxes
/ Heat
/ Ice cover
/ Ice models
/ Ice thickness
/ Mass balance
/ North Pole
/ Physical properties
/ Radiation
/ Regions
/ Sea ice
/ Sea ice models
/ Seasonal variability
/ Seasonal variations
/ Snow density
/ Spatial variability
/ Spatial variations
/ Specific heat
/ Time series
/ Winter
/ Winter ice
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Using Arctic ice mass balance buoys for evaluation of modelled ice energy fluxes
by
Blockley, Ed
, Collins, Mat
, West, Alex
in
Arctic ice
/ Arctic sea ice
/ Buoys
/ Climate models
/ Conduction
/ Constants
/ Datasets
/ Energy
/ Environment models
/ Evaluation
/ Fluxes
/ Heat
/ Ice cover
/ Ice models
/ Ice thickness
/ Mass balance
/ North Pole
/ Physical properties
/ Radiation
/ Regions
/ Sea ice
/ Sea ice models
/ Seasonal variability
/ Seasonal variations
/ Snow density
/ Spatial variability
/ Spatial variations
/ Specific heat
/ Time series
/ Winter
/ Winter ice
2020
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Using Arctic ice mass balance buoys for evaluation of modelled ice energy fluxes
Journal Article
Using Arctic ice mass balance buoys for evaluation of modelled ice energy fluxes
2020
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Overview
A new method of sea ice model evaluation is demonstrated. Data from the network of Arctic ice mass balance buoys (IMBs) are used to estimate distributions of vertical energy fluxes over sea ice in two densely sampled regions – the North Pole and Beaufort Sea. The resulting dataset captures seasonal variability in sea ice energy fluxes well, and it captures spatial variability to a lesser extent. The dataset is used to evaluate a coupled climate model, HadGEM2-ES (Hadley Centre Global Environment Model, version 2, Earth System), in the two regions. The evaluation shows HadGEM2-ES to simulate too much top melting in summer and too much basal conduction in winter. These results are consistent with a previous study of sea ice state and surface radiation in this model, increasing confidence in the IMB-based evaluation. In addition, the IMB-based evaluation suggests an additional important cause for excessive winter ice growth in HadGEM2-ES, a lack of sea ice heat capacity, which was not detectable in the earlier study.Uncertainty in the IMB fluxes caused by imperfect knowledge of ice salinity, snow density and other physical constants is quantified (as is inaccuracy due to imperfect sampling of ice thickness) and in most cases is found to be small relative to the model biases discussed. Hence the IMB-based evaluation is shown to be a valuable tool with which to analyse sea ice models and, by extension, better understand the large spread in coupled model simulations of the present-day ice state. Reducing this spread is a key task both in understanding the current rapid decline in Arctic sea ice and in constraining projections of future Arctic sea ice change.
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