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Dynamic and Thermodynamic Forcing of Ice Thickness Variations

Investigator:

John E. Walsh
Timothy L. Shy
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Start Date: November 15, 1997
Expire: October 31, 1998 (Estimated)
Expected Total Amt.: $45,731 (Estimated)
Fld Science: Polar Programs, Climate Related Activities

Abstract:

The project will utilize ice thickness measurements taken from submarines from 1977 - 1992 in the vicinity of the North Pole to analyze whether variations in ice dynamics or thermodynamics account for the observed changes in ice thickness that have occurred. The investigator will tune the dynamic and thermodynamic models to reduce the difference produced by the models from the observed thickness changes in the submarine data. The analysis of the actual vs. predicted ice thickness will allow examination of whether dynamic or thermodynamic parameters in the models have a greater influence on the changes from observed thickness. The results are critical to understanding the driving force behind changes in ice thickness. If the mechanism most responsible is thermodynamics, then the potential for global climate change to have an effect on ice thickness may be predicted with the thermodynamic models using temperature changes for the Arctic predicted from increasedgreenhouse gases in the atmosphere.


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