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Parameterization Of Boundary Conditions Between The Atmosphere and Cryosphere

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

E.M. Morris
Affiliation:
British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 OET, UK
R.J. Harding
Affiliation:
Institute of Hydrology, Natural Environment Research Council, Maclean Building, Crowmarsh Gifford, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10 8BB, UK
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Abstract

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Parameterization of the boundary conditions between the atmosphere and cryosphere is an important part of the general problem of modelling climatic change. It is necessary to define the mass, momentum and energy exchanges at the ice/atmosphere interface in order (i) to use atmospheric global circulation models (AGCMs) to predict future climate and (ii) to use snow, glacier or ice-sheet models to predict the corresponding response of the cryosphere. The physics of the boundary processes are fairly well known; the difficulty lies in choosing the appropriate space and time scales for modelling and in understanding the changes in the effective values of the model parameters which may be produced by spatial and temporal averaging.

Sensible heat, water vapour and momentum are tranferred vertically in the boundary layer of the atmosphere by turbulent motion. Equations for these fluxes contain parameters, the so-called scaling lengths zH, ZE and z0. Net radiation input to snow or ice is controlled by the albedo of the surface, α These four parameters play a major role in defining the boundary conditions between the atmosphere and cryosphere. It is normally assumed that their values are constants, determined by the characteristics of the snow or ice surface alone. For example, climate models may set zH = Ze = z0 = 0.1 mm and α = 0.9 for smooth, fresh snow. However, in modelling practice it is often found that the effective values of the parameters, i.e. those values that give the best simulations, are also influenced by the level of variability in the meteorological conditions.

The authors have made intensive micro-meteorological studies in the firn area of the Hintereisferner, Ötztal Alpen (Austria), on a frozen lake near Finse, Hardangervidda (Norway), and in the south-west coastal region of Greenland. Data from these field sites will be used to investigate the sensitivity of effective values of the boundary condition parameters to the choice of time scale using the Institute of Hydrology Distributed Model (IHDM).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1990