Evaluation of Arctic sea ice drift and its dependency on near-surface wind and sea ice conditions in the coupled regional climate model HIRHAM–NAOSIM
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Published:2020-05-29
Issue:5
Volume:14
Page:1727-1746
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Yu XiaoyongORCID, Rinke AnnetteORCID, Dorn WolfgangORCID, Spreen GunnarORCID, Lüpkes ChristofORCID, Sumata HiroshiORCID, Gryanik Vladimir M.
Abstract
Abstract. We examine the simulated Arctic sea ice drift speed for
the period 2003–2014 in the coupled Arctic regional climate model
HIRHAM–NAOSIM 2.0. In particular, we evaluate the dependency of the drift
speed on the near-surface wind speed and sea ice conditions. Considering the
seasonal cycle of the Arctic basin averaged drift speed, the model
reproduces the summer–autumn drift speed well but significantly
overestimates the winter–spring drift speed, compared to satellite-derived
observations. Also, the model does not capture the observed seasonal phase
lag between drift and wind speed, but the simulated drift speed is more in
phase with the near-surface wind. The model calculates a realistic negative
correlation between drift speed and ice thickness and between drift speed
and ice concentration during summer–autumn when the ice concentration is
relatively low, but the correlation is weaker than observed. A daily
grid-scale diagnostic indicates that the model reproduces the observed
positive correlation between drift and wind speed. The strongest impact of
wind changes on drift speed occurs for high and moderate wind speeds, with a
low impact for rather calm conditions. The correlation under low-wind
conditions is overestimated in the simulations compared to
observation/reanalysis data. A sensitivity experiment demonstrates the
significant effects of sea ice form drag from floe edges included by an
improved parameterization of the transfer coefficients for momentum and heat
over sea ice. However, this does not improve the agreement of the modeled
drift speed / wind speed ratio with observations based on reanalysis data for
wind and remote sensing data for sea ice drift. An improvement might be
achieved by tuning parameters that are not well established by observations.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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