4.6 Article

Simulations of firn processes over the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets: 1980-2021

Journal

CRYOSPHERE
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 3971-4011

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/tc-16-3971-2022

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ICESat-2 Project Science Office at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

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This study presents simulations of firn processes and calibrates a dry-snow densification scheme. The results show that seasonal volume changes associated with firn air content are larger than those associated with mass fluxes, but comparable in average over multiple years. The Greenland Ice Sheet has lost a significant amount of its firn air content, while the Antarctic Ice Sheet retains almost all of the meltwater.
Conversion of altimetry-derived ice-sheet volume change to mass requires an understanding of the evolution of the combined ice and air content within the firn column. In the absence of suitable techniques to observe the changes to the firn column across the entirety of an ice sheet, the firn column processes are typically modeled. Here, we present new simulations of firn processes over the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets (GrIS and AIS) using the Community Firn Model and atmospheric reanalysis variables for more than four decades. A data set of more than 250 measured depth-density profiles from both ice sheets provides the basis of the calibration of the dry-snow densification scheme. The resulting scheme results in a reduction in the rate of densification, relative to a commonly used semi-empirical model, through a decreased dependence on the accumulation rate, a proxy for overburden stress. The 1980-2020 modeled firn column runoff, when combined with atmospheric variables from MERRA-2, generates realistic mean integrated surface mass balance values for the Greenland (+390 Gt yr(-1)) and Antarctic (+2612 Gt yr(-1)) ice sheets when compared to published model-ensemble means. We find that seasonal volume changes associated with firn air content are on average approximately 2.5 times larger than those associated with mass fluxes from surface processes for the AIS and 1.5 times larger for the GrIS; however, when averaged over multiple years, ice and air-volume fluctuations within the firn column are of comparable magnitudes. Between 1996 and 2019, the Greenland Ice Sheet lost nearly 5 % of its firn air content, indicating a reduction in the total meltwater retention capability. Nearly all (94 %) of the meltwater produced over the Antarctic Ice Sheet is retained within the firn column through infiltration and refreezing.

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