Multi-Scale Sea Ice Kinematics Modeling with a Grid Hierarchy in Community Earth System Model (version 1.2.1)

Shiming Xu*, Jialiang Ma, Lu Zhou, Yan Zhang, Jiping Liu, Bin Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Working paperPreprintAcademic

Abstract

High-resolution sea ice modeling is becoming widely available for both operational forecasts and climate studies. Sea ice kinematics is the most prominent feature of high-resolution simulations, and with rheology models such as Viscous-Plastic, current models are able to reproduce multi-fractality and linear kinematic features in satellite observations. In this study, we carry out multi-scale sea ice modeling with Community Earth System Model (CESM) by using a grid hierarchy (22 km, 7.3 km, and 2.5 km grid stepping in the Arctic). By using atmospherically forced experiments, we simulate consistent sea ice climatology across the 3 resolutions. Furthermore, the model reproduces reasonable sea ice kinematics, including multi-fractal deformation and scaling properties that are temporally changing and dependent on circulation patterns and forcings (e.g., Arctic Oscillation). With the grid hierarchy, we are able to evaluate the model's effective spatial resolution regarding the statistics of kinematics, which is estimated to be about 6 to 7 times that of the grid's native resolution. Besides, we show that in our model, the convergence of the Elastic-Viscous-Plastic (EVP) rheology scheme plays an important role in reproducing reasonable kinematics statistics, and more strikingly, simulates systematically thinner sea ice than the standard, non-convergent experiments in landfast ice regions of Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Given the wide adoption of EVP and subcycling settings in current models, it highlights the importance of EVP convergence especially for climate studies and projections. The new grids and the model integration in CESM are openly provided for public use.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherEGU
Number of pages30
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Jun 2020

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