Abstract

The representation of tides in regional ocean simulations of the Amundsen Sea enhances ice-shelf melting, with weakest effects for Pine Island and Thwaites (<+10%) and strongest effects for Dotson, Cosgrove and Abbot (>+30%). Tides increase vertical mixing throughout the water column along the continental shelf break. Diurnal tides induce topographically trapped vorticity waves along the continental shelf break, likely underpinning the tidal rectification (residual circulation) simulated in the Dotson–Getz Trough. However, the primary effect by which tides affect ice-shelf melting is the increase of ice/ocean exchanges, rather than the modification of water masses on the continental shelf. Tide-induced velocities strengthen turbulent heat fluxes at the ice/ocean interface, thereby increasing melt rates. Approximately a third of this effect is counterbalanced by the resulting release of cold melt water that reduces melt downstream along the meltwater flow. The relatively weak tide-induced melting underneath Pine Island and Thwaites could be partly related to their particularly thick water column, which limits the presence of quarter wavelength tidal resonance. No sensitivity to the position of Pine Island and Thwaites with respect to the M2 critical latitude is found. We refine and evaluate existing methodologies to prescribe the effect of tides on ice-shelf melt rates in ocean models that do not explicitely include tidal forcing. The best results are obtained by prescribing spatially-dependent tidal top-boundary-layer velocities in the melt equations. These velocities can be approximated as a linear function of existing barotropic tidal solutions. A correction factor needs to be applied to account for the additional melt-induced circulation associated with tides and to reproduce the relative importance of dynamical and thermodynamical processes.

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