Abstract
AbstractFeedbacks between ice melt, glacier flow and ocean circulation can rapidly accelerate ice loss at tidewater glaciers and alter projections of sea-level rise. At the core of these projections is a model for ice melt that neglects the fact that glacier ice contains pressurized bubbles of air due to its formation from compressed snow. Current model estimates can underpredict glacier melt at termini outside the region influenced by the subglacial discharge plume by a factor of 10–100 compared with observations. Here we use laboratory-scale experiments and theoretical arguments to show that the bursting of pressurized bubbles from glacier ice could be a source of this discrepancy. These bubbles eject air into the seawater, delivering additional buoyancy and impulses of turbulent kinetic energy to the boundary layer, accelerating ice melt. We show that real glacier ice melts 2.25 times faster than clear bubble-free ice when driven by natural convection in a laboratory setting. We extend these results to the geophysical scale to show how bubble dynamics contribute to ice melt from tidewater glaciers. Consequently, these results could increase the accuracy of modelled predictions of ice loss to better constrain sea-level rise projections globally.
Funder
W. M. Keck Foundation
National Science Foundation
National Geographic Society
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference58 articles.
1. Edwards, T. L. et al. Projected land ice contributions to twenty-first-century sea level rise. Nature 593, 74–82 (2021).
2. Oppenheimer, M. et al. Sea level rise and implications for low-lying islands, coasts and communities. In IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (eds Pörtner, H.-O., Roberts et al.) (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2019).
3. Catania, G., Stearns, L., Moon, T., Enderlin, E. & Jackson, R. Future evolution of Greenland’s marine-terminating outlet glaciers. J. Geophys. Res. Earth Surf. 125, 2018–004873 (2020).
4. Aschwanden, A. & Brinkerhoff, D. Calibrated mass loss predictions for the Greenland Ice Sheet. Geophys. Res. Lett. 49, e2022GL099058 (2022).
5. Straneo, F. et al. The case for a sustained Greenland Ice Sheet-Ocean Observing System (GRIOOS). Front. Mar. Sci. 6, 138 (2019).
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献