Abstract

AbstractNew sea ice in the polar regions often begins as small pancake floes in autumn and winter that grow laterally and weld together into larger floes. However, conditions in polar oceans during freezeup are harsh, rendering in situ observations of small‐scale sea ice growth processes difficult and infrequent. Here we apply image processing techniques to images obtained by drifting wave buoys (SWIFTs) deployed in the autumn Arctic Ocean to quantify these processes in situ for the first time. Small pancake ice floes were observed to form and grow gradually in freezing, low‐wave conditions. We find that pancake floe diameters are limited by the wave field, such that floe diameter is proportional to wavelength and amplitude over time. Floe welding correlates well with sea ice concentration, and the observations can be used to estimate a key model parameter for floe size evolution. There is some agreement between observed lateral growth rates and those predicted using a theoretical model based on heat flux balance, but the model lateral growth rates are too conservative in these conditions. These results will be used to inform description of lateral floe growth and floe welding in new models that evolve sea ice floe size distribution.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call