Hostname: page-component-89b8bd64d-mmrw7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-08T03:49:37.679Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Improvements on the discretisation of boundary conditions to the momentum balance for glacial ice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 June 2024

Constantijn J. Berends*
Affiliation:
Institute for Marine and Atmospheric research Utrecht (IMAU), Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Roderik S. W. van de Wal
Affiliation:
Institute for Marine and Atmospheric research Utrecht (IMAU), Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands Faculty of Geosciences, Department of Physical Geography, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Paul A. Zegeling
Affiliation:
Faculty of Science, Department of Mathematics, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands
*
Corresponding author: Constantijn J. Berends; Email: c.j.berends@uu.nl
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The flow of glacial ice is typically approximated as a nonNewtonian viscous fluid, with the momentum balance described by (an approximation to) the Stokes equations, and the nonlinear rheology described by a flow law. The most commonly used rheological law for glacial ice, Glen's flow law, yields infinite viscosity in the case of zero deformation, which can be the case at the ice surface. This poses a problem when solving the momentum balance numerically. We show that two commonly-used discretisation schemes for the boundary conditions at the ice surface and base, which yield proper numerical convergence when applied to simpler problems, produce poor numerical convergence and large errors, when used to solve the momentum balance with Glen's flow law. We show that a discretisation scheme based on the concept of ghost nodes, which substitutes the boundary conditions directly into the momentum balance equations, yields second-order numerical convergence and errors that can be up to four orders of magnitude smaller. These results are robust across different momentum balance approximations. We show that the improved boundary conditions are particularly useful for solving the 3-D higher-order Blatter-Pattyn Approximation (BPA). In general, this work underlines the importance of thoroughly verifying the numerical solvers used in ice-sheet models, before applying them to future projections of ice-sheet mass loss.

Information

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of International Glaciological Society
Figure 0

Table 1. Symbols, notation, and units used in this work

Figure 1

Figure 1. The vertically staggered grid used to solve the SIA. The ice velocity u is defined on the regular grid (solid circles), while the effective viscosity η is defined on the staggered grid (open circles). In some literature, the staggered grid would be indicated by ‘half-indexing’, e.g. ηk−(1/2), ηk+(1/2).

Figure 2

Figure 2. The analytical solution to the SIA with Glen's flow law.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Velocity solutions resulting from the two-point one-sided scheme for the combination of the SIA with Glen's flow law, for nz = 8 (red), nz = 16 (blue), nz = 32 (green), and nz = 64 (yellow), compared to the analytical solution (solid black line).

Figure 4

Table 2. Physical parameters used in the SIA experiment with the artificial flow law

Figure 5

Figure 4. The analytical solution to the SIA with the artificial flow law.

Figure 6

Figure 5. The high-resolution solution to the SIA with the over-regularised Glen's flow law.

Figure 7

Figure 6. Convergence of the relative error in the surface velocity with the number of nodes, for the combination of the SIA with (A) Glen's flow law, (B) the linear flow law, and (C) the over-regularised variant of Glen's flow law. The different graphs show the results for the five different ways of discretising the zero-stress boundary condition at the ice surface: the two-point (blue), the three-point (red), the four-point (green), the five-point (yellow) one-sided schemes, and the ghost-node scheme (purple). Log-linear curves (solid lines) are fitted to each set of experiments to calculate the order of convergence R, which is displayed in the legend.

Figure 8

Table 3. Parameters of the ISMIP-HOM A experiment with Glen's flow law

Figure 9

Figure 7. Results of ISMIP-HOM Experiment A with the BPA, using Glen's flow law, with a horizontal length scale of L = 160 km. The ensemble results of Pattyn and others (2008) for the participating higher-order models (green) and full-Stokes models (blue) are shown by the shaded areas, with the solid line indicating the ensemble mean. The coloured lines show the results of our model at different numbers of vertical layers (see legend in Panel B), for the two-point one-sided scheme (panel A), the three-point one-sided scheme (panel B), and the ghost-point scheme (panel C). The small subpanels zoom in on the thin, slow-moving ice around x = L/4.

Figure 10

Figure 8. Results of ISMIP-HOM Experiment C with the BPA, using Glen's flow law, with a horizontal length scale of L = 160 km. The ensemble results of Pattyn and others (2008) for the participating higher-order models (green) and full-Stokes models (blue) are shown by the shaded areas, with the solid line indicating the ensemble mean. The coloured lines show the results of our model at different numbers of vertical layers (see legend in Panel B), for the two-point one-sided scheme (panel A), the three-point one-sided scheme (panel B), and the ghost-point scheme (panel C). The small subpanels zoom in on the thin, slow-moving ice around x = L/4.

Figure 11

Figure 9. Results of ISMIP-HOM Experiment A with the BPA, using Glen's flow law, with a horizontal length scale of L = 5 km. The ensemble results of Pattyn and others (2008) for the participating higher-order models (green) and full-Stokes models (blue) are shown by the shaded areas, with the solid line indicating the ensemble mean. The coloured lines show the results of our model at different numbers of vertical layers (see legend in Panel B), for the two-point one-sided scheme (panel A), the three-point one-sided scheme (panel B), and the ghost-point scheme (panel C). The small subpanels zoom in on the thin, slow-moving ice around x = L/4.

Figure 12

Figure 10. Convergence of the relative error in the surface velocity with the number of nodes, for the combination of the BPA with Glen's flow law, for (A) ISMIP-HOM experiment A with a horizontal length scale of L = 160 km, (B) experiment C with a length scale of L = 160 km, and (C) experiment A with a length scale of L = 5 km. The different graphs show the results for the three different ways of discretising the zero-stress boundary condition at the ice surface: the two-point one-sided scheme (blue), the three-point one-sided scheme (red), and the ghost-node scheme (green). Log-linear curves (dashed lines) are fitted to each set of experiments to calculate the order of convergence R, which is displayed in the legend.

Figure 13

Table 4. Parameters for ISMIP-HOM experiment A with the linear flow law

Figure 14

Figure 11. Results of ISMIP-HOM Experiment A with the BPA, using the linear flow law, with a horizontal length scale of L = 160 km. The coloured lines show the results of our model at different numbers of vertical layers (see legend in Panel A), for the two-point one-sided scheme (panel A), the three-point one-sided scheme (panel B), and the ghost-point scheme (panel C). The small subpanels zoom in on the thin, slow-moving ice around x = L/4.

Figure 15

Figure 12. Convergence of the relative error in the surface velocity with the number of nodes, for the combination of the BPA with the linear flow law, for ISMIP-HOM experiment A. The three panels show the results for the three different ways of discretising the zero-stress boundary condition at the ice surface: (A) the two-point one-sided scheme, (B) the three-point one-sided scheme, and (C) the ghost-node scheme. Log-linear curves (dashed lines) are fitted to each set of experiments to calculate the order of convergence R, which is displayed in the legend.

Figure 16

Figure 13. Relative velocity error at the ice surface for different values of the irregular grid ratio R, for (A) the two-point one-sided scheme, (B) the three-point one-sided scheme, and (C) the ghost-node scheme.

Figure 17

Figure 14. Convergence of the velocity error with the grid resolution for the SIA experiment with Glen's flow law, for (A) the two-point one-sided scheme, (B) the three-point one-sided scheme, and (C) the ghost-node scheme, for different values of the grid ratio R (red: R = 0.1, green: R = 1, blue: R = 10).

Figure 18

Figure 15. Relative error at the ice surface vs the regularisation term ${\boldsymbol \varepsilon }_0^2$, for the five different discretisation schemes.

Figure 19

Figure 16. Convergence rates with the vertical resolution vs the regularisation term ${\boldsymbol \varepsilon }_0^2$, for the five different discretisation schemes.

Figure 20

Figure 17. The different staggered 3D-grids. Note that the ‘real’ vertical dimension is displayed pointing upwards; because ζ = 0 at the ice surface, this means that vertical layer k + 1 lies below layer k.

Supplementary material: File

Berends et al. supplementary material

Berends et al. supplementary material
Download Berends et al. supplementary material(File)
File 10 MB