Linking scales in sea ice mechanics

Author:

Weiss Jérôme1,Dansereau Véronique2

Affiliation:

1. Institut des Sciences de la Terre (ISTerre), CNRS/Université Grenoble-Alpes, 1381 rue de la Piscine, 38400 Saint-Martin d'Hères Cedex, France

2. Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Géophysique de l'Environnement (LGGE), CNRS/Université Grenoble-Alpes, 54 rue Molière, 38402 Saint-Martin d'Hères Cedex, France

Abstract

Mechanics plays a key role in the evolution of the sea ice cover through its control on drift, on momentum and thermal energy exchanges between the polar oceans and the atmosphere along cracks and faults, and on ice thickness distribution through opening and ridging processes. At the local scale, a significant variability of the mechanical strength is associated with the microstructural heterogeneity of saline ice, however characterized by a small correlation length, below the ice thickness scale. Conversely, the sea ice mechanical fields (velocity, strain and stress) are characterized by long-ranged (more than 1000 km) and long-lasting (approx. few months) correlations. The associated space and time scaling laws are the signature of the brittle character of sea ice mechanics, with deformation resulting from a multi-scale accumulation of episodic fracturing and faulting events. To translate the short-range-correlated disorder on strength into long-range-correlated mechanical fields, several key ingredients are identified: long-ranged elastic interactions, slow driving conditions, a slow viscous-like relaxation of elastic stresses and a restoring/healing mechanism. These ingredients constrained the development of a new continuum mechanics modelling framework for the sea ice cover, called Maxwell–elasto-brittle. Idealized simulations without advection demonstrate that this rheological framework reproduces the main characteristics of sea ice mechanics, including anisotropy, spatial localization and intermittency, as well as the associated scaling laws. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Microdynamics of ice’.

Funder

Total E&P Recherche Developpement

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

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