4.7 Article

The seasonal evolution of sea ice floe size distribution

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 119, Issue 12, Pages 8767-8777

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2014JC010136

Keywords

sea ice; floe size distribution; floe breaking

Categories

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research
  2. CRREL Microgrant program

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The Arctic sea ice cover undergoes large changes over an annual cycle. In winter and spring, the ice cover consists of large, snow-covered plate-like ice floes, with very little open water. By the end of summer, the snow cover is gone and the large floes have broken into a complex mosaic of smaller, rounded floes surrounded by a lace of open water. This evolution strongly affects the distribution and fate of the solar radiation deposited in the ice-ocean system and consequently the heat budget of the ice cover. In particular, increased floe perimeter can result in enhanced lateral melting. We attempt to quantify the floe evolution process through the concept of a floe size distribution that is modified by lateral melting and floe breaking. A time series of aerial photographic surveys made during the SHEBA field experiment is analyzed to determine evolution of the floe size distribution from spring through summer. Based on earlier studies, we assume the floe size cumulative distribution could be represented by a power law D-, where D is the floe diameter. The exponent as well as the number density of floes N-tot are estimated from measurements of total ice area and perimeter. As summer progressed, there was an increase in as the size distribution shifted toward smaller floes and the number of floes increased. Lateral melting causes the distribution to deviate from a power law for small floe sizes.

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