Wind-driven collisions between floes explain the observed dispersion of Arctic sea ice
Bryan Shaddy, P. Alex Greaney, Bhargav Rallabandi

TL;DR
This paper uses stochastic granular simulations to explain how wind-driven collisions between ice floes account for the observed dispersion and velocity patterns of Arctic sea ice, improving predictive understanding.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach that models floe interactions responding to wind, accurately reproducing observed sea ice transport phenomena.
Findings
Simulations match observed sea ice dispersion and velocity distributions.
Collisions dissipate wind energy, shaping ice dynamics.
Kinetic theory aligns with observational data.
Abstract
The transport of sea ice over the polar oceans plays an important role in climate. This transport is driven predominantly by turbulent winds, leading to stochastic motion of ice floes. Observed diffusivities and velocity distributions of sea ice deviate by orders of magnitude from Brownian models, making it challenging to predict ice transport. We fully resolve these gaps through stochastic granular simulations that account for interactions between ice floes as they respond to a noisy wind. Using only directly measured quantities as model inputs, we reproduce the dispersion, diffusivity, velocity distribution, and power spectra of sea ice observed in the Fram Strait with remarkable quantitative accuracy. We understand these features as direct consequences of collisions between floes, which rapidly dissipate the energy injected by wind. A kinetic theory provides insights into these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Cryospheric studies and observations · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
